Summary

跟踪小鼠骨髓单核细胞<em>在体内</em

Published: February 27, 2015
doi:

Summary

Monocytes are key regulators of innate immunity and play a critical role in the renewal of the peripheral mononuclear phagocytic system and in case of inflammation. This manuscript describes the procedure of real time imaging of the mouse calvaria bone marrow to study the monocyte mobilisation mechanism.

Abstract

Real time multiphoton imaging provides a great opportunity to study cell trafficking and cell-to-cell interactions in their physiological 3-dimensionnal environment. Biological activities of immune cells mainly rely on their motility capacities. Blood monocytes have short half-life in the bloodstream; they originate in the bone marrow and are constitutively released from it. In inflammatory condition, this process is enhanced, leading to blood monocytosis and subsequent infiltration of the peripheral inflammatory tissues. Identifying the biomechanical events controlling monocyte trafficking from the bone marrow towards the vascular network is an important step to understand monocyte physiopathological relevance. We performed in vivo time-lapse imaging by two-photon microscopy of the skull bone marrow of the Csf1r-Gal4VP16/UAS-ECFP (MacBlue) mouse. The MacBlue mouse expresses the fluorescent reporters enhanced cyan fluorescent protein (ECFP) under the control of a myeloid specific promoter 1, in combination with vascular network labelling. We describe how this approach enables the tracking of individual medullar monocytes in real time to further quantify the migratory behaviour within the bone marrow parenchyma and the vasculature, as well as cell-to-cell interactions. This approach provides novel insights into the biology of the bone marrow monocyte subsets and allows to further address how these cells can be influenced in specific pathological conditions.

Introduction

The bone marrow plays a central role in hematopoiesis and represents the main reservoir of monocytes that constitutively recirculate between the blood and the medullar parenchyma, renew the pool of circulating monocytes with a short life span 2,3 and participate in the reconstitution of the steady state tissue-macrophages and dendritic cells 4. During inflammation or after transient aplasia, monocytes are actively mobilized from either the bone marrow or the spleen 5, 6, 7 and colonize inflamed organs. Several chemoattractant axis have been involved in the process of myeloid cell mobilization from the bone marrow 8, 5, 6,9. Beyond the myeloid compartment the bone marrow is also an important site of T lymphocyte priming 10 and a niche of immunological memory 11,12. Thus, this tissue is central for numerous investigations in the field of hematology and immunology. Our knowledge on the structural organization of medullar myeloid cells mainly arises from the analysis of histological section of fixed tissues 13. This static view does not allow for a study of the cellular exchange dynamic between the different compartments of the bone marrow, which is the basis of its functional activity.

Intravital imaging constitutes an important biological input in the study of cell mobility, cell adherence and cell-to-cell interactions, which were previously described only from in vitro systems. Technical challenges for proper intravital imaging include the ability to reach the tissue of interest in an optical point of view, and to maximize its isolation from physiological (breath, muscle or peristaltic contractions) or mechanical drifts (tissue disruption and extension following surgery, and exposure to microscope objective as well as temperature and vascular/oxygenation perturbations). Microscopic drifts may limit the ability to keep the focus a long time and could introduce artifacts in the quantification of cell motility. One alternative, validated for several tissues to reduce these technical difficulties, is to work on explanted tissue incubated in a thermostated and oxygenated medium; however, complete disruption of the lymphatic and vascular circulation may be problematic. Intravital imaging of skull bone marrow has several advantages concerning these issues. Firstly, it requires minimal surgical action. Secondly, thickness of the bone in this region allows direct visualization of bone marrow niches without abrasion, thus reducing physiological perturbations. The medullar network can be imaged in the parasagittal region of the bone; however the sinusoids are more visible in the fronto-parietal area where the bone matrix is thinner12,14.

Intravital imaging relies on the availability of the most accurate fluorescent reporter tagging the population of interest. In vitro labelling of purified cell population before adoptive transfer led to important characterization of hematopoietic stem cell niches 15 or bone marrow endothelial microdomains favouring tumor engraftment 16, and provided several fundamental inputs on key concepts in immunology 17 . However, this approach usually requires hundreds of thousands of cells to get a chance to detect them afterwards in vivo. This could be explained by the high mortality rate following staining, the dilution in the whole body and the change in the activation state, which might lead to biased homing. Endogenous tagging from transgenic mouse system greatly overcomes these limitations and has allowed to image the behaviour of endogenous osteoblast 8, megakaryocytes 18 or myeloid-lineage subsets 6 . Nevertheless, one has to be cautious when considering the specificity of the fluorescent reporter among the studied subset.

The Csf1r-Gal4VP16/UAS-ECFP, called MacBlue mouse 1, is a valuable transgenic system to study medullar monocytes with real time imaging 6. Intravenous injection of high molecular weight rhodamin-dextran distinguishes the medullar parenchyma from the vascular sinusoid network of the bone marrow. Using this approach, it is possible to track the monocyte behaviour in the different medullar compartments in a specific physiopathological context of interest. Furthermore, we propose an additional strategy to compare monocyte dynamics with that of neutrophils through in vivo labelling using a specific antibody.

Protocol

注:所有实验的协议批准了法国动物实验伦理委员会和一些A-75-2065验证了“服务保障等桑特阿尼马莱斯,环境公司”。样本大小被选择以确保该实验的再现性,并根据动物伦理规章的3R。 1.制备的小鼠麻醉用于成像的短时间(少于1小时),麻醉的小鼠腹膜内注射200微升含氯胺酮(100毫克/千克)和赛拉嗪(10毫克/千克)盐水溶液。 可替代地,用于成?…

Representative Results

鼠标的头骨结构提供了活体成像研究骨髓生理学的好机会。骨可绕前顶区薄,能够获得访问骨髓龛未经骨的磨损。 图1表示一个MacBlue转基因小鼠的头骨的宽2D场。骨基质主要是由胶原蛋白的我很容易被SHG 19检测。注射罗丹明-葡聚糖的污渍骨髓的血管网并允许对骨基质和容器14之间实质骨髓龛的鉴定。 ECFP细胞分布于骨髓的两个隔室,但是从骨基质缺席。单核细胞是根据…

Discussion

体内成像方法的关键点是,以确保以最大限度成像的持续时间,并尽量减少细菌污染和炎症,这可能会影响炎性细胞的动力学的风险的焦点的稳定性。颅骨骨髓成像如下这些目标为手术执行以访问骨髓是最小的。利用无菌材料和防腐剂的必须限制感染可能诱导扰动在细胞稳态的风险。

立体定向持有人的发展可能是具有挑战性的,并要求(客观的和机动阶段显微镜…

Disclosures

The authors have nothing to disclose.

Acknowledgements

作者要感谢安妮·达龙和皮埃尔路易斯Loyher为编辑的协助下,PLATEFORME Imagerie萨伯特慈善(PICPS)与双光子显微镜和动物基金“NAC”和卡米尔Baudesson小鼠繁殖援助援助。这项研究导致这些结果已收到的资金来自欧盟第七框架计划(FP7 / 2007至2013年)根据赠款协议N°304810 – 的RAID和n°241440-Endostem,从INSERM,从UNIVERSITE皮埃尔与玛丽·居里“崛起“从LA”法甲驳乐毒瘤“,从”协会倒拉RECHERCHE河畔乐癌症“和”法新社国立德拉RECHERCHE“计划诞生日(ANR-EMMA-050)。 PH由LA“法甲驳乐癌症”的支持。

Materials

Name of Material/ Equipment Company Catalog Number Comments/Description
Ketamin Merial 100mg/mL, anesthetic
Xylazin Bayer HealthCare 10mg/mL, anesthetic
Isofluran Baxter 2.5%, anesthetic
O2/NO2 70/30 mixture, anesthetic
Rhodamin-Dextran Invitrogen 2MDa, 10mg/mL, Vascular staining
Ly6G-PE Becton-Dickinson clone 1A8, neutrophils staining
Stereotactic holder Home made surgery
Ethanol 70% surgery
Sterile scissors and nippers surgery
Rubber ring 18mm diameter, surgery
Glubran 2 Queryo Medical Surgical Glue, rubber ring fixation
Small gauge needles Terumo surgery
Zeiss LSM 710 NLO multiphoton microscope  Carl Zeiss Microscope
Ti:Sapphire crystal laser  Coherent Chameleon Ultra 140fs pulses of NIR light
Zen 2010 Carl Zeiss Acquistion Software
Imaris Bitplane  Bitplane Analysis Software, 3D automatic tracking
PBS 1X D. Dutscher surgery
Thermostated chamber Carl Zeiss intravital imaging

References

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Cite This Article
Hamon, P., Rodero, M. P., Combadière, C., Boissonnas, A. Tracking Mouse Bone Marrow Monocytes In Vivo. J. Vis. Exp. (96), e52476, doi:10.3791/52476 (2015).

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