This protocol explains primary Lgr5-positve organoid culture and the subsequent performance of retroviral transduction. This enables Cre-inducible overexpression or knockdown of the delivered transgene and allows functional studies to be carried out in the novel in vitro organotypic model system.
Lgr5-positive stem cells can be supplemented with the essential growth factors Egf, Noggin, and R-Spondin, which allows us to culture ever-expanding primary 3D epithelial structures in vitro. Both the architecture and physiological properties of these 'mini-guts', also called organoids, closely resemble their in vivo counterparts. This makes them an attractive model system for the small intestinal epithelium. Using retroviral transduction, functional genetics can now be performed by conditional gene overexpression or knockdown. This video demonstrates the procedure of organoid culture, the generation of retroviruses, and the retroviral transduction of organoids to assist phenotypic analysis of the small intestinal epithelium in vitro. This novel organotypic model system in combination with retroviral mediated gene expression provides a valuable tool for rapid analysis of gene function in vitro without the need of costly and time-consuming generation for transgenic animals.
High-throughput functional genetics is needed to increase our biological understanding of the body, to improve current basic science and medicine. Mouse genetics has been the gold standard for investigating gene function in vivo, although it is both time-consuming and costly. Cell lines, being the other common choice, have a higher throughput capacity while being less expensive. However, they are impeded by their inability to reproduce the proper microenvironment and thereby the physiological responses seen in vivo. Hence, there is an unambiguous need for an easy-to-handle model system, which allows cost/time-efficient high throughput analysis while mimicking the physiological responses observed in in vivo transgenic (tg) mouse experiments.
For the endodermal epithelium one such model system appeared in 20091. Among the knowledge gained from the discovery of Lgr5-positive intestinal stem cells was information about the niche corresponding to the extra-cellular matrix and growth factors necessary for stem cell maintenance. Utilizing this information it became possible to establish ‘mini-guts’ also known as organoids2. Recently a consensus nomenclature for in vitro cultures, where organoids are referred to as ‘enteroids’, was suggested3. Like cell lines, the organoids are ever-expanding and easy to treat with ligands and inhibitors. However, instead of being two-dimensional they are three-dimensional self-organizing structures that retain the crypt-villus organization as well as stem cells and differentiated cell lineages of the small intestine (SI). Organoids consist of a single layer of epithelial cells that surround a luminal area. Protruding budding structures correspond to small intestinal crypts containing the stem cell compartment. Starting from the tip of the budding structure progenitor cells differentiate as they migrate towards the epithelial lining, where terminally differentiated cells are shed into the lumen. Compared to cell lines, this ex vivo system more closely recapitulates the normal physiology and is therefore a promising model system for the small intestinal epithelium.
In this video protocol of retroviral transduction, we present a method that enables ex vivo gene function studies in this novel organoid culture system. We start by describing organoid culture in a step-by-step manner, and continue by demonstrating the generation of retroviruses followed by the transduction procedure. Finally, there is a section for additional advice for troubleshooting. An advantage of this technique is that it can be combined with live imaging or drug screening to study homeostasis, cell fate decisions and cell-cell interactions in the intestinal epithelium. Due to their simple architecture and fast turnover rate, organoids represent an ideal model system for studying adult stem cell biology. In addition retroviral transduction can be applied to organoids derived from pre-established transgenic mice as well as human patient samples. As knock-in and knock-out approaches cannot be extended to humans, the human SI organoids constitute an attractive alternative.
In summary, gene manipulation through retroviral transduction allows phenotypic analysis in small intestinal organoids derived from mice or human tissue samples, thereby complementing mouse genetics and cell lines while opening new avenues for studies in human derived tissues. Retroviral transduction enables gain- and loss-of-function studies to be performed in the organoid culture system4. This makes it a valuable resource for investigating gene function, adult stem cell biology and disease while being in accordance with the three Rs (reduction, refinement, and replacement).
All mice used in the following protocol were kept in specific pathogen-free conditions, and all procedures were performed according to the United Kingdom Home Office regulations.
1. Preparation
2. Culturing Small Intestinal (SI) Organoids
NOTE: Unless otherwise stated, all incubations are performed at 37 °C, 5% CO2 in a humidified incubator. Equipment and reagents coming into contact with living cells must be sterile.
Pre-warming the tissue culture plate is important as it prevents the basement matrix (Matrigel or BME) drops from spreading out when seeding. Also, the basement matrix should be kept on ice at all times. Store at -20 °C and thaw on ice before use.
3. Pre-infection Treatment of SI Organoids
NOTE: Figure 1 illustrates the transduction procedure.
4. Virus Production
5. Organoid Fragment Preparation
6. Retroviral Transduction
7. Spinoculation and Plating
8. Seeding of Infected Organoid Fragments
9. Selection
10. Post-infection Treatment of SI Organoids
11. Confirmation of Infection and Expression/Suppression of the Gene of Interest
Organoids are ready to be split when the central lumen is darkened due to the presence of dead cells (Figure 2). After 2-3 days of pre-treatment organoids should adopt a round cystic morphology (Figure 3). This increases the number of stem cells, enhancing the chances of obtaining stable integration. The size of the viral pellet may vary following centrifugation of the viral supernatant, most likely due to varying contribution of cell debris to the pellet size. No clear correlation to transduction efficiency has been observed. During the selection procedure non-transduced organoids will die, while the ones having a stable integration will remain. The fluorescent protein from MSCV-eGFP retrovirus can be observed in cells originating from surviving organoids, which have a cystic morphology, within 2-3 days following transduction (Figure 4).
Figure 1. A schematic drawing of the retroviral transduction procedure. Prior to infection organoids are pre-treated using ENRWntNic until they adopt a cystic structure (step 1). Platinum-E cells are used as the packaging cell line, and are cultured until they reach 70-80% confluency. Thereafter they are transfected with the retroviral construct using PEI. Viruses are harvested 2 days later (step 2). Organoids are trypsinized to obtain fragments containing 1-10 cells (step 3), and are then infected (step 4). Following spinoculation to increase the infection efficiency (step 5), the infected organoid fragments are seeded (step 6) and 2-3 days later selection for positive clones with stable integration can be performed (step 7).
Figure 2. Representative image of organoids after 4-6 days of culture. The lumen is filled with dead cells, making it appear dark. Organoids at this stage are ready to be passaged.
Figure 3. Representative image of small intestinal organoids cultured in ENRWntNic media for 3-4 days. The organoids adopt a cystic morphology.
Figure 4. Representative image of small intestinal organoids (a) that show viral transgene expression (b, eGFP).
Advanced DMEM/F12 +++ | |
Store at 4 °C for 4 weeks | |
Advanced DMEM/F12 | 500 ml |
Glutamax 100x | 5 ml |
Hepes 1 M | 5 ml |
Antibiotics 100x | 5 ml |
ENRWntNic medium (for 20 ml) | |
Store at 4 °C for 2 weeks | |
Advanced DMEM/F12 +++ | 7.2 ml |
B27 supplement (50x) | 400 µl |
N2 supplement (100x) | 200 µl |
n-Acetylcysteine (500 mM) | 50 µl |
mouse EGF (500 µg/ml) | 2 µl |
mouse Noggin (100 µg/ml) | 20 µl |
R-Spondin conditioned medium | 2 ml |
Wnt3a conditioned medium | 10 ml |
Nicotinamide (1 M) | 200 µl |
Transduction medium (for 20 ml) | |
Prepare fresh | |
ENRWntNic medium | 20 ml |
Y-27632 (10 µM) | 20 µl |
Polybrene (8 µg/ml) | 20 µl |
ENR medium (for 20 ml) | |
Store at 4 °C for 4 weeks | |
Advanced DMEM/F12 +++ | 17.4 ml |
B27 supplement (50x) | 400 µl |
N2 supplement (100x) | 200 µl |
n-Acetylcysteine (500 mM) | 50 µl |
mouse EGF (500 µg/ml) | 2 µl |
mouse Noggin (100 µg/ml) | 20 µl |
R-Spondin conditioned medium | 2 ml |
Media for Platinum-E cells (for 500 ml) | |
Store at 4 °C for 12 weeks | |
DMEM | 449.45 ml |
Fetal Bovine Serum (FBS) | 50 ml |
Puromycin (1 μg/ml) | 50 µl |
Blasticidin (10 μg/ml) | 500 µl |
Table 1. Media composition for Advanced DMEM/F12 +++, ENRWntNic medium, Transduction medium, ENR medium, and medium for Platinum-E cells.
To achieve high transduction efficiency certain aspects are critical. One is the pre-treatment of organoids with ENRWntNic media until they adopt a round cystic shape. This increases the number of stem cells and thereby the chance of obtaining a stable integration of the transgene, as well as increasing the survival rate of the SI organoids throughout the transduction procedure. Another parameter is the incubation time following spinoculation. Too short or too long incubation results in poor transduction efficiency and poor survival of the organoids, respectively. The spinoculation step is not essential although it significantly increases the percentage of transduced organoids. Finally, high-titer virus is key for successful transduction. This is dependent on the type of packaging cell line and virus. The combination of Platinum-E cell line and murine stem cell virus (MSCV), was found to produce a titer high enough for transduction of organoids.
Below are tips for troubleshooting which may help to achieve successful transduction. First, if the transfection of the packaging cell line is poor, make sure that the confluency of the cells is between 70-80% and that the incubation time of the pooled PEI-DNA mixture is between 20-30 min. The survival of the organoids during transduction highly depends on the fragment size. Too long trypsinization causes the majority of fragments to consist of less than 3 cells and thereby decreases organoid survivability. Another factor is the activity of the Wnt conditioned medium, if the activity is too low boosting it through addition of CHIR99021 in a working concentration of 5 μM can increase the survival. CHIR99021 inhibits GSK3, resulting in increased Wnt signaling. Furthermore, Y-27362, which prevents anoikis is added to the transduction media to improve organoid survivability, since the organoids are disrupted to fragments (containing 1-10 cells) prior to transduction. As mentioned above, the incubation time after spinoculation should not exceed 6 hr. Lastly, if poor transduction is observed the aforementioned factors influencing the viral titer and the size limit of the insert for the retroviral vector should be considered. The efficiency of the knockdown is highly dependent on the miRNA. Since the efficiency varies with the combination of the target gene and miRNA it is worth performing an efficiency screen to identify those that work best.
The technique is restricted to the epithelial phenomena of the organoid system. In the future it might be possible to study infectious or immune-mediated diseases through co-culture of pathogens or reconstitution with components derived from the immune system, respectively. Moreover, retroviruses can only carry inserts of a relatively small size. Consequently, naturally occurring regulatory regions have to be excluded and therefore the expression of the transgene cannot mimic that of the endogenous gene. As mentioned above, the knockdown efficiency is dependent on the target gene and miRNA. If no miRNA with suitable knockdown efficiency can be found it may limit the use of the technique for that particular target gene.
Theoretically, organoids are compatible with all standardized manipulative techniques used for cell lines. Retroviral transduction was the first method to be reported4, and recently BAC (bacterial artificial chromosome)-transgenesis has become available5. With a total generation time of 2-3 weeks, after transfection of the viral plasmid into the packaging cell line, it is significantly faster than the generation of a transgenic (tg) mouse. By maintaining the in vivo crypt-villus architecture while containing stem cells as well as all differentiated cell lineages of the intestinal epithelium, the organoid culture system bridges the gap between tg animal and previously used cell culture.
The protocol described here provides a method to perform phenotypic analysis of endodermal epithelium in vitro through gain- and loss- of function studies. This makes it feasible to address physiologically relevant questions in adult stem cell biology, with a minimal need of tg mice. For example, the generation of conditional knockout mice could be avoided by using organoids derived from newborn mutants with perinatal lethality6. In addition, the technique can be applied to organoids derived from previously established knockout mice to study the role of paralogues by performing additional knockdown7,8.
Following the establishment of small intestinal organoids, adaptation of the original culture protocol has allowed culturing of pancreatic, liver, colon and stomach epithelia9-11. Furthermore, human intestinal organoids and tumor organoids have been derived from normal human biopsies, primary adenoma and colorectal cancer biopsies10. The viral infection protocol can easily be extended to these types of organoids and provides an unprecedented way of performing functional studies in human derived tissues.
Taken together, retroviral transduction of small intestinal organoids is a valuable resource for investigating stem cell maintenance, differentiation, and cell fate decision, as well as cell signaling and cell- cell interactions.
The authors have nothing to disclose.
Koo BK and Mustata RC are supported by the Sir Henry Dale Fellowship from the Wellcome Trust and Andersson-Rolf A is supported by the Medical Research Council (MRC). Fink J is supported by the Wellcome Trust 4-year PhD-Programme.
Advanced DMEM/F12 | Invitrogen | 12634-034 | |
Glutamax 100x | Invitrogen | 35050-068 | |
Hepes 1M | Invitrogen | 15630-056 | |
Penicillin- Streptomycin 100x | Invitrogen | 15140-122 | |
B27 supplement 50x | Invitrogen | 17504-044 | |
N2 supplement 100x | Invitrogen | 17502-048 | |
n-Acetylcysteine 500 mM | Sigma-Aldrich | A9165-5G | |
mouse EGF 500 µg/ml | Invitrogen Biosource | PMG8043 | |
mouse Noggin 100 µg/ml | Peprotech | 250-38 | |
R-Spondin conditioned medium | The conditioned media is generated from HEK293 cells, for details see Sato and Clevers 2013 | ||
Wnt conditioned medium | The conditioned media is generated from L cells, for details see Sato and Clevers 2013 | ||
Nicotinamide 1 M | Sigma | N0636 | |
Y-27632 10 µM | Sigma | Y0503-1MG | |
Polybrene 8 µg/ml) | Sigma | H9268-5G | |
Standard BD Matrigel matrix | BD Biosciences | 356231 | Basement Matrix Extract (Cultrex PathClear BME Reduced Growth Factor Type 2, 3533-005-02 ) supplied by AMSBIO can be used as an alterntive. |
24 well plate | Greiner Bio One | 662960 | |
48 well plate | Greiner Bio One | 677980 | |
CHIR99021 | Sigma | A3734-1MG | |
Platinum- E cells | Cell biolabs | RV-102 | |
Puromycin | Invitrogen | A1113802 | |
Blasticidin | Invitrogen | A1113902 | |
Polyethyleneimine (PEI) | Polysciences | 23966 | |
opti-MEM | Life Technologies | 51985-034 | |
TrypLE | Invitrogen | 12605-010 | |
Parafilm | Sigma | P7793-1EA | |
4-OHT | Sigma | H7904 |