This article describes a neuronal culture system that can be used to obtain large quantities of pure axonal samples for biochemical and immunocytochemical analyses. This technique will allow an improved understanding of normal axonal physiology and signaling pathways leading to neurodegeneration.
Neuronal axons use specific mechanisms to mediate extension, maintain integrity, and induce degeneration. An appropriate balance of these events is required to shape functional neuronal circuits. The protocol described here explains how to use cell culture inserts bearing a porous membrane (filter) to obtain large amounts of pure axonal preparations suitable for examination by conventional biochemical or immunocytochemical techniques. The functionality of these filter inserts will be demonstrated with models of developmental pruning and Wallerian degeneration, using explants of embryonic dorsal root ganglion. Axonal integrity and function is compromised in a wide variety of neurodegenerative pathologies. Indeed, it is now clear that axonal dysfunction appears much earlier in the course of the disease than neuronal soma loss in several neurodegenerative diseases, indicating that axonal-specific processes are primarily targeted in these disorders. By obtaining pure axonal samples for analysis by molecular and biochemical techniques, this technique has the potential to shed new light into mechanisms regulating the physiology and pathophysiology of axons. This in turn will have an impact in our understanding of the processes that drive degenerative diseases of the nervous system.
The axonal compartment of neurons shows a large degree of functional independence from the somato-dendritic compartment. In projection neurons, axons contain most of the neuronal protein1,2. The study of the physiology and pathophysiology of axons has gained momentum in the neuroscience community because recent studies have shown that early axonal dysfunction appears to be a common feature of neurodegenerative diseases and neuropsychiatric disorders3. It seems likely that a better understanding of axonal-exclusive mechanisms under normal and pathological conditions will shed light on the early events that drive dysfunction.
The present protocol describes how to use culture inserts bearing a porous membrane (filter) to obtain large amounts of pure axonal material that is suitable for biochemical and immunocytochemical analyses. The use of filter inserts to study axonal biology was first implemented by Steward and colleagues4 and further developed by Twiss and colleagues5 to its present configuration. The technique is now in current use by groups studying different aspects of axonal and dendrite biology, with slight modifications in each case to accommodate for the population of neurons studied, the treatments performed and the type of biochemical analyses used6-9. The present protocol does not intend to accommodate all the alternatives for such a variety of applications, but rather provide a simple approach that is suitable for most applications. In particular, the protocol described here uses a triple coating that maximizes axonal yield for biochemical analyses and is most suitable to study axonal degeneration –other coatings described in the literature produced less axons that retract and degenerate faster when deprived from trophic factors9.
In this procedure, neuronal cell bodies remain isolated atop the filter while axons pass through the pores and grow along its bottom surface. Pure axons (free of glia and neuronal cell body contaminants) that grow on the bottom surface of the filter can be collected for biochemical analyses or can be fixed in situ and examined by immunocytochemical techniques9. The procedure relies on the use of embryonic sensory neurons from the dorsal root ganglia (DRG). Embryonic DRGs are widely used to study axonal biology because neurites from these cells undergo fast and robust growth in vitro when maintained in nerve growth factor (NGF), and because they rapidly undergo degeneration when deprived of this factor. Also, DRG neurons lack dendrites, so that all the neurites collected by this method are purely axons.
Filter inserts represent a great advantage compared to other approaches used to study axons. Studies relying on the use of microscopy to differentiate processes occurring in the cell soma from those in axons provide limited biochemical information. As another example, compartmentalized culture systems (e.g., Campenot chambers10 or microfluidic devices11) are useful for imaging approaches and for differential treatment of cell compartments but provide only small amounts of axonal material, precluding the use of these techniques for biochemical analyses which require relatively large amounts of sample. Further, their use requires significant training as well as specialized devices, and they are time consuming. Another approach often used to isolate axons from explants is to manually remove an explant center (containing neuronal cell bodies) before axonal sample collection. Although this can produce large quantities of axon-enriched preparations, axons in this preparation can be enveloped in glia and rapidly removing 20 explant’s bodies consecutively from 6 wells (as an example of a minimal experiment) is time-consuming and at the limit of feasibility.
In contrast, the method presented here produces abundant and pure axonal preparations that can then be analyzed by virtually any biochemical technique that is commonly used to analyze whole-cell lysates, like western blot, immunoprecipitation6, northern blot5 mass spectrometry6, RNA purification7,12,13, among others. Moreover, the protocol can be applied to immunofluorescence (IF) techniques, as it is possible to fix axons growing in the bottom side of the filter to further examine them by IF. This approach greatly facilitates the analysis of axonal-specific processes since there are no cell bodies in the final preparation. This is a significant advantage since a high immunofluorescent signal from cell bodies often undermines examination and analysis of a weaker signal originating from thin structures such as axons.
Two applications of the culture method to study axonal degeneration are described; a model of developmental pruning and a model of injury-induced degeneration (commonly referred to as Wallerian degeneration). The modeling of developmental pruning is based on the fact that sensory neurons in vivo compete for limiting amounts of target-derived NGF and those failing to receive enough neurotrophic support degenerate14. This phenomenon can be mimicked in embryonic DRG cultures by withdrawing NGF from the culture media, which, as happens in vivo, initiates axonal degeneration followed by cell body destruction. To model Wallerian degeneration, the top side of the filter with the cell bodies is scraped away. The axons that had grown onto the bottom side of the filter become physically separated from the cell bodies and thereafter undergo the rapid and stereotypic degenerative process known as Wallerian degeneration15, named after A. Waller who first reported the phenomenon in 185016.
NOTE: The following procedures are in accordance with guidelines approved by the Canadian Council of Animal Care. All efforts are made to minimize pain and distress of animals during procedures.
1. Coating of Filters
NOTE: When culture filter inserts are placed in wells of multi-well plates, two compartments are defined: the top compartment is the region above the insert and the bottom compartment is the one below the insert Figure 1A.a-b. Explants are seeded in the top compartment where they attach to the top side of the filter; many axons grow through the filter and extend on the bottom side of the filter, within the bottom compartment Figure 1A.c. The standard working volumes (i.e. for applying coating solution, washes, culture media, etc) are 2 ml for the bottom compartment and 1 ml for the top compartment and are going to be referred to in the protocol as “standard volumes”. Add solutions starting with the bottom compartment by placing the tip of the pipette in the gap between the insert and the side of the well. Also, tilt the insert to one side while dispensing the solution to prevent bubbles from being trapped on the bottom of the filter.
2. Dissecting Embryonic Dorsal Root Ganglion (DRG) Explants
3. Seeding and Maintenance of Dorsal Root Ganglion Explants on Filters
4. Trophic Factor Withdrawal Treatment
NGF withdrawal induces axonal degeneration with axonal fragmentation (determined by phase contrast and β-III-tubulin IF) that first appears around 12 hr after withdrawal. Complete fragmentation is achieved by 36 hr. How long the degeneration is left to proceed for has to be chosen by the end user according to the experimental design.
5. Axonal Transection to Induce Wallerian Degeneration
This procedure leaves the axons on the bottom side of the filter detached from their cell body, but otherwise intact. Thereafter, these axons rapidly initiate Wallerian degeneration. Axonal fragmentation (evidenced by phase contrast or β-III-tubulin IF) first appears by 3 hr after transection; by 9 hr, axons are completely fragmented and are detached from the filter. How long the degeneration is left to proceed for has to be chosen by the end user according to the experimental design.
6. Protein Extraction of Axonal Samples
7. Immunofluorescence Examination of Axons on Filters
The following steps outline the general manipulations to perform IF staining on filter inserts, exemplified by the detection of β-III-tubulin. Fixative, incubation times, concentrations and other particulars should be optimized for other antigen-antibody pairs.
Dorsal root ganglion explants from E13.5 mice grow extensively on filters coated sequentially with poly-D-lysine, laminin and collagen (Figure 1B, left), reaching up to 2 mm within 2 days in culture. This substrate combination yields particularly exuberant growth; other combinations yield axons that are considerably shorter (Figure 1B, right). Moreover, DRGs maintained on filters extend more and longer axons than DRGs grown on plastic Figure 1C.
Filters with pores of 1 µm in diameter, used in this protocol, retain cell bodies on the upper side of the filter, while allowing neurites to grow through the pores and extend on the bottom surface. This is clearly shown by epifluorescence microscopy of filters stained for nuclei (DAPI) and β-III-tubulin Figure 1D. In intact filters it is possible to observe cell nuclei, both from neurons and non-neuronal cells, concentrated in the explant center and some irradiating from it. However, when the top side of the filter is scraped, nuclei are gone and only axons can be detected, on the filters bottom side.
Figure 1E shows an example of a filter bottom that originally sustained the growth of approximately 17 explants. In this example, the top side was cleaned before fixation and therefore the immunofluorescent signal represents pure axons on the bottom side of the filter. Protein extraction from axonal preparations (bottom side of the filter) are devoid of nuclear proteins Figure 1F, demonstrating that the preparation is free of cell bodies. Alternatively, when working with RNA extraction, it is possible to confirm the purity of the axonal preparation by comparing the presence of differentially localized mRNAs (i.e. γ-actin) between whole-cell lysates and axonal preparations (as shown by others5).
Developmental pruning of sensory neurons can be modeled in filters subjected to trophic factor deprivation. After 2-3 days of axon extension in the presence of NGF, the media is changed to one lacking NGF and containing an anti-NGF antibody that will sequester any remaining NGF Figure 2A. At the desired time points, filters are processed for biochemistry or immunocytochemistry.
Figure 2B shows typical examples of bottom sides of filters stained for β-III-tubulin before and after deprivation. After 12 hr of deprivation there is little axonal fragmentation, although some axons start to show beading. However, extensive axonal degeneration is achieved after 36 of deprivation.
Wallerian degeneration induced by axon transection of sensory neurons is easily modeled in explants grown on filters by scraping the top side of the filter, leaving behind the distal portion of the axons that grew on the bottom side of the filter Figure 3A. Figure 3B shows typical examples of bottom sides of filters stained for β-III-tubulin before and after in-filter axotomy. At 3 hr after axotomy, there is little fragmentation, although some axons start to show beading. By 7.5 hr, most axons are fragmented or completely gone. Pretreatment of explants with nicotinamide adenine dinucleotide (NAD+, 5 mM, 30 min pretreatment) protects from Wallerian degeneration induced on filters, as it does in other in vitro and in vivo models19.
Figure 1. Filter inserts produce large quantities of pure axonal preparations. A) A schema of an insert (a), of an insert in a well (b) and the final configuration with DRG explants (c). B) The sequential coating of filters with poly-D-lysine, laminin and collagen results in explants that grow more and longer axons compared to those grown with poly-D-lysine alone or poly-D-lysine and collagen. The images were produced by tiling overlapping, low-magnification pictures using imaging software. C) Under the same substrate coating conditions, DRG explants maintained on filters show considerably more exuberant axonal growth than explants grown on plastic. D) The axonal preparation obtained by scraping the top side of the filter is devoid of cell nuclei. E) Example of axons that originated from approximately 17 explants and grown on the bottom side of a 24 mm filter. As much as 30 explants can readily grow in these preparations, yielding enough axonal material for common biochemical approaches. F) Immunoblots of lysates collected from filter tops versus bottoms demonstrate that histone H3, a nuclear marker, is confined to the filter tops. The total protein content was normalized across the different samples. Please click here to view a larger version of this figure.
Figure 2. The study of axonal degeneration induced by trophic factor withdrawal in filter inserts. A) Schema outlining a typical NGF-deprivation experiment. DRG explants grow extensive axons in the presence of NGF, and degenerate upon NGF deprivation. B) Representative images at different magnifications (5X and 20X objectives) of axonal preparations from explants maintained in NGF or deprived of NGF for 12 or 36 hr. Please click here to view a larger version of this figure.
Figure 3. The study of Wallerian axonal degeneration induced by axonal transection in filter inserts. A) Schema outlining a typical axotomy experiment. Axon severing is achieved by scraping the top side of the filter, leaving severed axons (devoid of cell bodies) on the bottom side. B) Representative images of axonal preparations from intact explants or after 3 or 7.5 hr after transection in the presence or absence of 5 mM of NAD+. Please click here to view a larger version of this figure.
Important parameters to take into account when adapting this technique include the neuronal population that will be studied, the substrate, pore size of the filter and surface area. All these parameters will impact the specificity, quality and quantity of the neurite preparation obtained, and must be considered carefully by the end user. In the examples presented in this protocol, the use of DRG neurons has the advantage of extending only axons, thus giving a pure (specific) axonal preparation.
Axonal growth of embryonic DRGs is very fast compared to neurons from the central nervous system, allowing axonal samples to be prepared after only 2 days in culture. The pore size of 1 µm has proven sufficiently small to prevent cell bodies from migrating into the bottom surface while allowing efficient passage of growing axons. Compared to smaller sizes available (i.e. 0.4 µm) it does not impose selectivity for thin axons. For the study of DRG explants, the 24 mm filter insert (for use in 6-wells plates) produces sufficient quantities of axonal protein sample for most techniques, including immunoprecipitation, which often requires a large amount of protein input. However, smaller sizes (i.e. filter inserts for 12-well plates) are suitable for some applications, especially if using dissociated cells and/or immunocytochemistry.
Although the filter insert efficiently isolates neurites from cell bodies for examination, it is important to note that both compartments share the same culture media, limiting the experimental manipulations to whole-cell treatments. Other isolation approaches, including compartmentalized Campenot chambers or microfluidic chambers, allow for differential treatment of the different compartments. The experimenter must determine which of these cell-compartment isolation techniques is most suitable for their own specific experimental design.
Alternative methods to obtain pure axonal samples include compartmentalized culture systems like Campenot chambers or microfluidic devices or manually removing an explant center (containing neuronal cell bodies). The compartmentalized approaches provide only small amounts of axonal material. Their use requires significant training as well as specialized devices, and they are time consuming. On the other hand, removing the explant center to obtain enriched axonal samples is impractical, requires expertise and is limited to neuronal populations that can be grown as explants. In contrast, the method presented here produces abundant and pure axonal preparations, is fast and does not require extensive training. Foremost, it can also be performed with dissociated neurons.
Of course, the isolation capability of filter inserts can be advantageous beyond axonal degeneration. For example, the biochemistry of regenerating growth cones can be easily studied by scraping the bottom side of filters with grown DRG explants. Within hours, axotomized DRG neurons will regenerate growth cones in the bottom side of the filters that, as described in this protocol, can then be isolated for the purification of regenerating growth cone proteins. Moreover, the axonal samples obtained by this method can be analyzed by biochemical methods other than western blotting. For example, axons can be lysed in RIPA or CHAPS lysis buffers to obtain a protein sample that can be further subjected to immunoprecipitation or pulldown experiments9. Alternatively, axonal samples can be processed for RNA extraction, as previously described5.
The advantage of the culture system presented is not limited to sensory neurons. For example, cortical neurons will extend dendrites and axons that will form synapses on the bottom side of the filter7. Thus, pure neurite samples (enriched with synapses) can be isolated from cell bodies for detailed biochemical analyses of processes that take place exclusively in synapses. The use of this technique is simple and has no outstanding critical steps. However, axonal length and morphology is quite sensitive to the quality of the coating of the filters. Hence, care must be taken to use fresh and homogenous coating solutions for the indicated amounts of time to obtain robust and consistent axonal samples. The widespread use of this technique will help advance our knowledge of the physiology of axons, under normal circumstances and in disease.
The authors have nothing to disclose.
This project was supported by grant MOP62827 from the Canadian Institutes of Health Research.
CD-1 mouse, E13 timed pregnancy | Charles River | In house timed pregnancies can be done by mating mice and checking for vaginal plugs (Day E0) | |
Falcon Cell Culture Inserts | Corning | 353102 | 1 µm pore size, fits 6-well receiving plate |
Falcon Cell Culture Companion Plates | Corning | 353502 | Receiving plates for inserts |
Poly-D-Lysine | Sigma-Aldrich | P6407 | Used at 1 mg/ml in water. Can re-use once. |
Laminin | Sigma-Aldrich | L2020 | Used at 10 ug/ml in water. Take 100X stock from -80 °C and thaw overnight at 4 °C |
PureCol Bovine Collagen Solution | Advanced Biomatrix | 5005-B | |
Leibovitz's L-15 Medium | Invitrogen | 11415-064 | Can be replaced by DMEM. |
Neurobasal Medium | Invitrogen | 21103-049 | |
B-27 Serum-Free Supplement | Invitrogen | 17504-044 | |
5-Fluoro-2′-deoxyuridine (FDU) | Sigma-Aldrich | F0503 | |
NGF (2.5S, beta subunit) | Cedarlane | CLMCNET-001 | |
Anti-NGF Antibody | Prepared in-house | – | As described in: Acheson, A., Barker, P.A., Alderson, R.F., Miller, F.D. & Murphy, R.A. Detection of brain-derived neurotrophic factor-like activity in fibroblasts and Schwann cells: inhibition by antibodies to NGF. Neuron.7, 265-75, (1991) |
Alomone Labs | AN-240 | Commercial option | |
Anti-Tubulin Antibody | Millipore | MAB5564 | |
Alexa Fluor 488 Goat Anti-Mouse Antibody | Invitrogen | A-11029 | |
DRG culture medium | |||
Neurobasal Medium 2 % B27 Neurobasal Supplement 2 mM l-Glutamine 1 % Penicillin-Streptomysin 10 µM FDU 15 ng/ml NGF (bottom compartment only) |
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1X Laemmli Sample Buffer | |||
10 % SDS 0.5 M DTT 0.5 M Tris (pH 6.8) 5 % Glycerol 0.01 % (w/v) Bromophenol blue |