Establishing a Whole-Cell Patch Clamp for Electrophysiological Recording from a Flat-Mount Mouse Retina

Published: October 31, 2024

Abstract

Source: Tu, H., et al. Patch Clamp Recording of Starburst Amacrine Cells in a Flat-mount Preparation of Deafferentated Mouse Retina. J. Vis. Exp. (2016).

This video demonstrates a whole-cell patch-clamp technique for electrophysiological recording from a flat-mount mouse retina. A thin glass pipette with an electrode is used to approach starburst amacrine cells (SACs) within the retina. After forming a seal, suction is applied to rupture the membrane and form the whole-cell patch-clamp configuration. Finally, the flow of ions through the SAC synaptic receptors is measured using the configuration.

Protocol

All procedures involving sample collection have been performed in accordance with the institute's IRB guidelines.

1. External and Internal Solutions

  1. Use mammalian Ringer's solution during retina dissection and as the external solution in subsequent electrophysiological recording. Prepare the mammalian Ringer's solution from 10x stock solution (without calcium) on the day of recording, and add CaCl2 drop-wise after 15 min of carbogenation (95% O2 and 5% CO2). The final 1x solution contains (in mM): 120 NaCl, 5 KCl, 25 NaHCO3, 0.8 Na2HPO4, 0.1 NaH2PO4, 2 CaCl2, 1 MgSO4 and 10 D-glucose.
  2. Use two internal solutions to characterize SAC oscillations. Test the usefulness of prepared solutions in prolonged whole-cell patch clamp recordings on adult mouse retinal ganglion cells (RGCs) and store the verified batches in 500 µl aliquots at -20 °C until use.
    1. For recording membrane potential oscillation, use a potassium-based internal solution that contains (in mM): 125 K-gluconate, 8 NaCl, 4 adenosine triphosphate (ATP)-Mg, 0.5 Li-guanosine triphosphate (GTP), 5 ethylene glycol tetraacetic acid (EGTA), 10 4-(2-hydroxyethyl)-1-piperazineethanesulfonic acid (HEPES) and 0.2% biocytin (w/v). Adjust pH to 7.3 with KOH.
    2. For recording excitatory and inhibitory postsynaptic currents, use a cesium-based internal solution that contains (in mM): 100 Cs-methanesulfonate, 8 NaCl, 4 ATP-Mg, 0.5 Li-GTP, 5 EGTA, 10 HEPES and 0.2% biocytin (w/v). Adjust pH to 7.3 with CsOH.

2. Preparation for the Day of Recording

  1. To prepare a nitrocellulose membrane with open holes, manually punch the membrane with a customized puncher made from a blunted 16 G syringe needle and flatten the membrane between two clean glass plates. For a whole-mount retina, make a central hole 0.2 mm in diameter and surround it by 4 larger holes that are 1-1.2 mm in diameter.
  2. To make a customized backfill filament for loading internal solution into electrodes, melt a 10 µl pipette tip in the middle and gently lengthen the melted portion until it cools and hardens. Just prior to use, use a clean razor blade to trim the filament until it is slightly longer than the patch pipettes.
  3. Pull patch pipettes in a programmable puller from borosilicate glass tube with an internal filament. Manufacture the micropipettes on the day of experiment and use them immediately.
    NOTE: For recording SACs, we use the following puller setting: heat: 484; pull: 0; velocity: 25; delay time: 1; pressure: 400 and a ramp value of 462. The outside diameter (O.D.) and inside diameter (I.D.) of the borosilicate tubes are 1.65 mm and 1.0 mm, respectively. Resistance of the pipettes is 10-14 MΩ.
  4. One hr before tissue harvest, thaw a tube of internal solution by shaking it on a vortex for >30 min.

3. Retina Dissection

  1. Anesthetize the animal by 4% isoflurane in oxygen until the animal loses responsiveness to a toe pinch. Sacrifice the animal by cervical dislocation.
  2. Cut both eyeballs off the optic nerves at 1-2 mm away from the optic nerve heads with straight-pointed iris scissors.
  3. Roll the eyeballs on a clean paper towel to remove blood and then immerse them in carbogenated mammalian Ringer's solution. Punch a hole in the limbus with a 23 G needle and bisect the eyeballs by cutting along the limbus with micro-scissors. Remove the cornea and lens using fine forceps.
    1. For retinal whole-mount, gently peel the entire retina off the pigmented epithelium with fine forceps and make four 1.5-2 mm orthogonal cuts from the edge toward the optic nerve head.
  4. Immerse a punched nitrocellulose membrane into the dish and gently drag the retina over it with the ganglion cell layer (GCL) side up. Place the optic nerve head into the center hole when preparing a whole-mount retina. Transfer the membrane with the retina into another clean dish. Gently flatten the retina with a fine paint brush to look like a Maltese cross and lay all four edges over the holes.
    1. If a fraction of the retina is to be examined at a time, cut each eyecup prepared from Step 3.3 into 3-4 pieces with a razor blade with the pigmented epithelium remains attached. Protect the unused pieces from light in carbogenated external solution and use them within 12 hr.
  5. Blot the nitrocellulose membrane with a piece of dry filter paper and remove the vitreous and inner limiting membrane with forceps and a paint brush.
  6. Make sure that all retinal edges are fully attached to the membrane before transferring the assembly into the recording chamber with a sealed glass cover slip at the bottom. Secure the membrane with vacuum grease to the cover slip and rehydrate the retina with the external solution. Be careful not to trap any air bubbles underneath the assembly.
  7. Set the chamber onto the stage of an upright microscope. Perfuse the chamber with warm (34-35 °C) carbogenated external solution at a rate of ~3 ml per min.
  8. Examine the retina under a 10x objective lens first, and then use a 60x water-immersion lens to see GCL and inner nuclear layer (INL) neurons under differential interference contrast (DIC) and/or epifluorescence. To visualize tdTomato-expressing SACs, use a white light-emitting diode (LED) light source in combination with an excitation filter of 554 nm and an emission filter of 581 nm.

4. Whole-cell Patch Clamp Recording from Flat-mount Retina

  1. Filter the internal solution through a syringe filter into the custom backfill filament.
  2. Insert the filament into a freshly pulled micropipette and dispense the internal solution near the tip until the solution covers the silver electrode wire for >5 mm. Fasten the micropipette onto an electrode holder with a suction pole, through which pressure inside the electrode can be adjusted by pushing or pulling the plunger of a tube-connected 10 ml plastic syringe.
  3. Find the pipette under the objective and bring it down to ~100 µm above the retina. Under the current-follower mode (I = 0), use DC offset to zero the standing DC voltage signal. Measure the pipette resistance under the current clamp (IClamp) mode by injecting fixed amplitude square wave currents through the pipette while it is in the bath and neutralize the difference by turning the Raccess knob. Use the reading on the Raccess knob to calculate pipette resistance by the Ohm's law.
  4. Slowly bring the electrode to ~10 µm above the retina. Apply positive pressure to the electrode. Watch the reflection change near the pipette tip as it approaches the retina. Quickly but gently force the pipette into the GCL and reduce the positive pressure immediately.
  5. Move the pipette toward a labeled neuron. Avoid contacting other neurons, blood vessels and endfeet of Muller cells. Apply more positive pressure if needed to prevent electrode clogging.
  6. Position the pipette tip near the midline of a labeled neuron until a dimple is visible. Release the positive pressure and allow the plasma membrane to bounce back onto the pipette tip.
  7. Apply 20 to 120 pA negative currents to the pipette to help the formation of a giga-ohm seal. Apply a gentle suction if necessary to pull the plasma membrane into the pipette. Wait 5 min after seal formation to rupture the cell membrane. This allows the spilled internal solution to be cleared by superfusion. Rupture the membrane by a gentle suction.
  8. After the membrane rupture and while in the current clamp mode, switch on bridge balance and adjust it using the Raccess knob.
    NOTE: For a small cell like the SAC, only slight adjustment is needed, if any. Alternatively, record excitatory and inhibitory postsynaptic currents in the voltage clamp mode (VClamp) by holding the cell at reversal potentials of chloride (around -75 mV) and glutamate (around 0 mV), respectively. Check and adjust pipette position if needed to accommodate occasional retina and/or micromanipulator drift.
  9. To record membrane potential or current change before, during and after pharmacological treatment, prepare synaptic blockers (e.g., cyanquixaline [CNQX], (2R)-amino-5-phosphonopentanoate [AP5], picrotoxin, tubocurarine, etc.) and channel modulators (e.g., flupirtine, dopamine, meclofenamic acid, etc.) fresh on the day of experiment from frozen stocks. Dilute the drugs with carbogenated Ringer's solution. Apply them in a batch manner through perfusion.
  10. After recording, gently remove the pipette from the soma. Transfer the assembly from the chamber to a clean dish. Detach and re-attach the retina onto another flattened nitrocellulose membrane without punched holes to ensure retina flatness during fixation.

Offenlegungen

The authors have nothing to disclose.

Materials

Fixed-stage fluorescent microscope with DIC Olympus BX51-WI
Micromanipulators Sutter MP-225
Patch clamp amplifier A-M System AM2400
AD converter National Instrument NI-USB-6221
Heater controller Warner Instrument TC-324B
Inline heater Warner Instrument SC-20
Peristaltic pump Rainin Dynamax
pipette puller Sutter Instrument P-1000
Glass tube with filament King Precision Glass Customized
Stimulator A.M.P.I. Master-8
Biocytin Sigma B4261
NaCl Sigma S6191
KCl Sigma P5405
NaHCO3 Fisher BP328-1
Na2HPO4 Sigma S0876
NaH2PO4 Sigma S5011
CaCl2 Sigma C5670
MgSO4 Sigma M1880
D-glucose Sigma G6152
K-gluconate Sigma G4500
ATP-Mg Sigma A9187
Li-GTP Sigma G5884
EGTA Sigma E0396
HEPES Sigma H4034
KOH Sigma P5958
Cs-methanesulfonate Sigma C1426
CsOH Sigma 232041
Syringe filter Nalgene 171
1 ml syringe Rainin 17013002
10 ul pipette tip Genesee Scientific 24-130RL
10X PBS Lonza 17-517Q

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Diesen Artikel zitieren
Establishing a Whole-Cell Patch Clamp for Electrophysiological Recording from a Flat-Mount Mouse Retina. J. Vis. Exp. (Pending Publication), e22713, doi: (2024).

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