We describe a protocol using C. elegans and RNAi feeding libraries that allows automated measurement of multiple parameters such as fluorescence, size and opacity of individual worms in a population. We give one example of a screen to identify genes involved in anti-fungal innate immunity in C. elegans.
RNA interference is a powerful method to understand gene function, especially when conducted at a whole-genome scale and in a quantitative context. In C. elegans, gene function can be knocked down simply and efficiently by feeding worms with bacteria expressing a dsRNA corresponding to a specific gene 1. While the creation of libraries of RNAi clones covering most of the C. elegans genome 2,3 opened the way for true functional genomic studies (see for example 4-7), most established methods are laborious. Moy and colleagues have developed semi-automated protocols that facilitate genome-wide screens 8. The approach relies on microscopic imaging and image analysis.
Here we describe an alternative protocol for a high-throughput genome-wide screen, based on robotic handling of bacterial RNAi clones, quantitative analysis using the COPAS Biosort (Union Biometrica (UBI)), and an integrated software: the MBioLIMS (Laboratory Information Management System from Modul-Bio) a technology that provides increased throughput for data management and sample tracking. The method allows screens to be conducted on solid medium plates. This is particularly important for some studies, such as those addressing host-pathogen interactions in C. elegans, since certain microbes do not efficiently infect worms in liquid culture.
We show how the method can be used to quantify the importance of genes in anti-fungal innate immunity in C. elegans. In this case, the approach relies on the use of a transgenic strain carrying an epidermal infection-inducible fluorescent reporter gene, with GFP under the control of the promoter of the antimicrobial peptide gene nlp 29 and a red fluorescent reporter that is expressed constitutively in the epidermis. The latter provides an internal control for the functional integrity of the epidermis and nonspecific transgene silencing9. When control worms are infected by the fungus they fluoresce green. Knocking down by RNAi a gene required for nlp 29 expression results in diminished fluorescence after infection. Currently, this protocol allows more than 3,000 RNAi clones to be tested and analyzed per week, opening the possibility of screening the entire genome in less than 2 months.
The protocol as described below is divided into steps on five successive days (Fig. 1). As noted, certain steps can be done on different days. The duration of each step, as well as the quantity of material required (e.g. worms, bacteria, media) will depend on the number of 96 well plates treated per experiment.
Day 1
1. Preparation of the 96-well NGM RNAi plates
The following protocol is adapted from the standard method for making worm culture plates 10, which includes details of sterilization techniques for the different solutions.
Note: plates can be prepared up to a week in advance and stored at 4°C; this can make the organization of subsequent steps easier.
2. Automated preparation of the 96-DeepWell LB plates
Note: plates can be prepared 2 to 3 days in advance and stored at 4°C; this can make the organization of subsequent steps easier.
3. Grow the RNAi bacterial clones in the 96-DeepWell LB plates (overnight culture)
All liquid handling steps are best done with a robotic liquid handling system (e.g. Tecan), but can be performed manually using, for example, a 96-pin replicator. If the RNAi library clones are already in a 96-well format go to step 3.5.
Day 2
4. Seed the RNAi bacterial clones onto the 96-well NGM RNAi plates
This step should be done in the morning following the ON culture.
5. Prepare a synchronized population of worms
For this step, we use transgenic worms carrying the reporter gene(s) of interest (e.g. an infection-inducible pnlp-29::GFP construct and, as an internal control, a constitutive pcol-12::dsRed transgene construct). Because of the observed decrease of transgene expression with time, we thaw fresh batches of worms every 6 weeks. We culture worms for at least 2 generations before use, and ensure that the worms have never starved before the assay. If day 2 of the protocol is Tuesday, we prepare worms on Friday by placing 30 young adult worms on a 9 cm NGM plate spread with OP50 bacteria at 20°C; they will be ready to bleach on Tuesday (see Table 1).
Day 3
6. Distribute the worms on the 96-well RNAi-NGM plates for feeding and RNAi
This step should be done in the morning. L1-stage synchronized worms are distributed onto each 96-well bacterial clone for feeding and RNAi.
7. Test the Drechmeria coniospora spores for effective infection
This step is specific for the present screen. It consists in testing different batches of spores to select highly infective ones. Therefore it should be done as close as possible before day 4, the day of infection. It is necessary to prepare sufficient L3-L4 worms in advance for these tests (Table 1). The detailed methods required for D. coniospora culture have been described elsewhere 11.
Day 4
8. Infect the RNAi exposed worms with D. coniospora spores
This step is performed 30 hours after RNAi feeding when worms have reached the L3-L4 stage.
Day 5
9. Observation and storage of the plates before automated quantitative analysis
This step starts 18 hours after infection and is performed during day 5. Worms are expected to be young adults starting to lay eggs. During this step the phenotype is scored visually: either worms fluoresce green which corresponds to a normal situation following infection, or the induction of the GFP is altered in a given well which means that the silenced gene changes the response to infection.
10. Representative Results
Using the quantities of worms and bacteria given above, at the end of the experiment, in most wells, the animals should all have developed to adulthood and there should still be some food left in all wells. Under these conditions, most wells should also contain eggs. There should be a sufficient number of adults in each well so that Biosort data is obtained for at least 50 individual worms. On the other hand, if the RNAi is efficient, a large number of RNAi clones will provoke a visible phenotype. For example, worms may be uncoordinated, or more obviously, sterile, or arrested in their development. This should occur frequently, so that generally at least one well per 96-well plate contains worms with an evident RNAi phenotype. When the phenotype of interest is the expression of a GFP reporter gene, wells with a gfp(RNAi) clone provide a robust control (Fig. 2). Other phenotypes, such as an alteration of size can be readily measured with the Biosort (Fig. 3A). We observed that worms could migrate to adjacent wells at very low frequency (<1%, BS, unpublished results) when the food in a well did run out.
Knocking down the function of different classes of genes can affect transgenes expression in C. elegans. Some are non-specifically required for transgenes expression 12. Others, such as tissue-specific transcription factors, for example the epidermal GATA factor ELT-3 13, will be required in particular subsets of cells. This is one of the reasons for the inclusion of a non-related and constitutive epidermal cell transgene reporter construct (pcol-12::dsRed) in the strain used for the current protocol. This allows such genes to be distinguished from those specifically involved in the gene regulatory process under study (Fig. 3B & C). This transgene is expressed during all larval stages. If an assay involves detecting gene expression in embryos a different control reporter gene would be required.
One of the innovations of this protocol is the use of freezing plates to postpone their analysis. Freezing allows plates to be stored for up to two weeks without substantially altering the results. Although the absolute values of measured fluorescence may be changed, their relative ratios remain similar (Fig. 4). On the other hand, RNAi is an intrinsically variable experimental procedure 14. To obtain robust results and eliminate the many potential false positives, RNAi screens need to be replicated, at least once. If the experiments are successfully conducted, there should be a reasonable correlation between the results from one plate tested on different days. Particularly, the genes that have a strong effect should be clearly identifiable, even if their precise quantitative effect is not identical between duplicate plates (Fig. 5).
Figure 1. Overall scheme for a typical experiment.
Figure 2. Control RNAi using a clone targeting GFP expression. Transgenic worms expressing constitutively a pcol-12::dsRed reporter and an inducible pnlp 29::GFP reporter on solid medium in a 96-well plate visualized using a GFP dissecting microscope with a filter set allowing simultaneous observation of red and green fluorescence. Worms were exposed to control (upper panels) or a GFP RNAi clone (bottom panels) for 48 h. The panels on the left are uninfected worms, those on the right worms 18 hours after infection with D. coniospora. The scale bar is 1 mm.
Figure 3. Quantitative analysis of a 96-well plate. The COPAS Biosort generates numerical data for each worm analyzed. The graphs show the average and standard deviation for the time of flight (TOF; A) which corresponds to the size of the worms 15, red fluorescence (B) and the ratio (X100) of green fluorescence to TOF (C) of transgenic worms expressing constitutively a pcol-12::dsRed reporter and an inducible pnlp 29::GFP reporter that had been cultured on solid medium in a 96-well plate with different RNAi clones for 48 h, 18 hours after infection with D. coniospora. Certain clones, such as the one highlighted with the arrow in (A), provoke growth defects and/or affect the expression of pcol-12::dsRed. Others, specifically affect GFP expression, as highlighted by the arrow in (C). This particular clone targets the gene nsy 1, previously shown to be important for the regulation of nlp 29 13. Green, red fluorescence and TOF are measured in arbitrary but constant units.
Figure 4. Comparison of data obtained with live and frozen samples from the same experiment. Plates of L4 worms carrying pnlp-29::GFP and pcol-12::dsRed transgenes were either infected with D. coniospora or not. After 18h, each plate was roughly divided in 2; half was analyzed immediately and half frozen at -80°C for 24h, before thawing and analysis. Values for average TOF (size of worms), EXT (optical density) and Green and Red fluorescence were calculated for each sample. The graph shows the ratio of the average for infected divided by non-infected samples, for the frozen and live samples (n= 7638 and 5096, and 8634 and 3850 worms, respectively).
Figure 5. Comparative analysis of duplicate 96-well plates. The normalized fluorescence ratio (the mean fluorescence ratio (here, 100*green/TOF) for each well divided by the trimmed (25th to 75th percentile) mean for each plate) for each well from duplicate analyses of a representative 96-well plate.
Material | Experimental Timeline |
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Thursday
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Table 1. Example of a one-cycle experiment with 30 plates.
Here is presented the material needed for a one-cycle experiment of 30 plates and a timeline for an experiment from step 1 to step 12 organized on 9 days.
Nematode Growth Media (NGM), 100 mL:
0.3 g | NaCl |
0.25 g | BactoPeptone |
2 g | BactoAgar |
100 μL | 5 mg/mL Cholesterol in EtOH |
Add deionized water to 100 mL | |
Autoclave for 5 minutes at 121°C and let cool, then add: | |
100 μL | 1 M MgSO4 |
100 μL | 1 M CaCl2 |
2.5 mL | 1 M KPO4 pH 6.0 |
NGM for RNAi treatment in 96-well plate, 100 mL:
0.29 g | NaCl |
0.25 g | BactoPeptone |
1.7 g | BactoAgar |
100 μL | 5 mg/mL Cholesterol in EtOH |
Add deionized water to 100 mL | |
Autoclave for 5 minutes at 121 °C and let cool, then add: | |
100 μL | 1 M MgSO4 |
100 μL | 1 M CaCl2 |
2.5 mL | 1 M KPO4 pH 6.0 |
400 μL | 1 M IPTG |
100 μL | 100 mg/mL Ampicillin |
100 μL | 12.5 mg/mL Tetracycline |
Bleach solution, 5mL:
2.5 mL H2O
2.3 mL Bleach
0.2 mL NaOH 50%
NaOH 50%, 100 mL:
50 g NaOH
Add deionized water to 100 mL
NaCl 50mM-Triton 0.05%, 400 mL:
4 mL NaCl 5 M
1 mL Triton 20%
Add deionized water to 400 mL
Triton 20%, 10 mL:
2 mL Triton X-100
8 mL deionized water
M9 buffer, 1L
6 g Na2HPO4 (MW : 178)
3 g KH2PO4 (MW : 136)
5 g NaCl
Add deionized water to 1 L
Autoclave
Add 1 mL MgSO4 1 M
Luria Broth (LB), 1L:
10 g BactoTryptone
20 g Yeast extract
10 g NaCl
Add deionized water to 1 L
Autoclave
1 M MgSO4, 300 mL:
73.95 g MgSO4
Add deionized water to 300 mL
Autoclave and store at room temperature
5 mg/mL Cholesterol, 200 mL:
1 g Cholesterol
Add 100% EtOH to 200 mL
Filter sterilize and store at room temperature
1 M CaCl2, 500 mL:
27.75 g CaCl2
Add deionized water to 500 mL
Filter sterilize and store at room temperature
1 M KPO4 pH 6.0, 4 L:
517 g KH2PO4 (MW : 136)
207 g K2HPO4 (MW : 174)
Add deionized water to 4 L
100 mg/mL Ampicillin (Amp), 10 mL:
1 g Ampicillin
Add deionized water to 10 mL
Store at -20 °C
1 M Isopropyl β-d-Thiogalactopyranoside (IPTG), 10 mL:
2.38 g IPTG
Add deionized water to 10 mL
Store at -20 °C
12.5 mg/mL Tetracycline, 100 mL
1.25 g Tetracycline
Add 100% EtOH to 100 mL
Table 2. Solutions.
The current protocol allows large-scale RNAi screening in C. elegans on solid media, using the level of expression of a fluorescent reporter gene as a read-out. It has been optimized with automated tools to facilitate high-throughput assays, allowing easy and fast handling of large numbers of samples, in an efficient, reliable and reproducible manner. Other methods have been described that do not rely so heavily on automated liquid sample handling 8.
One key organizational aspect to the protocol has been the development of a robust method of sample tracking by adapting the commercial MBioLIMS software to the RNAi screen procedure in collaboration with the company ModulBio. At every stage of the procedure, plates are now identified by barcodes generated within the LIMS. As the LIMS also records the identity of the clones in each well on each plate, going from well to putative gene is simple. And beyond this, the LIMS links to the community database WormBase, allowing direct access to molecular and functional data about any given gene. The LIMS also facilitates analyses to be conducted on the plate or even chromosome and whole-genome level. For these analyses, the data is stored in a way that is entirely compatible with previously described tools such as COPAmulti 16.
One critical experimental point in the method is the adjustment of the quantity of food relative to the number of worms. For many assays, it is essential that worms do not starve at the end of the experiment but it is also important not to have too much food at the start. We have observed that a high density of food decreases fluorescence induction in the protocol using worms carrying the pnlp-29::GFP reporter. This may reflect a diminished infection efficiency when worms are cultured in too much bacteria (BS, unpublished results). At the same time, the culture conditions of the RNAi bacteria is also important, since this determines whether dsRNA is produced at an optimal level. Some protocols for large-scale RNAi require culture of RNAi clones on agar plates prior to seeding liquid cultures 8. We obtained robust gene silencing omitting this step. We opted for growing an excess of each culture to ensure homogenous results. The protocol described in fact provides sufficient material to conduct 2 or 3 screens in parallel. In the interest of obtaining the most robust results, we favor, however, conducting screens in duplicate using independent cultures of worms, RNAi bacteria and fungal spores.
Another critical step is related to using medium that is neither too humid nor too dry. If the plates are not dry enough, the RNAi bacteria does not dry properly and worms will swim during the assay. This can cause problems. For example, worms are not efficiently infected by D. coniospora in liquid (C. Couillault, unpublished results). On the other hand, in dry plates, the osmolarity of the culture medium increases. This has direct effects on worm physiology 17, including the induction of some antimicrobial peptide genes, such as nlp 29 18. The volume used to dispense worms and spores is critical to allow effective and rapid drying. If more than 10 μL of liquid is added to fresh plates, the wells can take many hours to dry. This can mean that it is difficult to use robotic methods to add worms to the plates. For example, each worm is dispensed by the Biosort in around 1 μL of liquid. We currently distribute the worms manually as that also allows us to overcome the tendency of worms in solution to sediment.
We previously reported an adjustment of the Biosort that allowed one 96-well plate to be analyzed in 36 minutes 19. The machine’s manufacturer UBI now offers a modification of the Biosort to decrease further the analysis time. With the “FastReFlex”, samples are directly routed through the flow cell for analysis, bypassing the bubble-trap filter. This results in a significant reduction in the time for data acquisition; a whole plate can be analyzed in 22 min allowing around 20 plates to be treated per day. If plates were not frozen, however, there would be an 8 hour interval between the first and last ones. Given the relatively short duration of the experiment, with the infection lasting just 18 hours, this would introduce an unacceptable variable across plates. Not only does freezing plates prior to analysis resolve this problem, but it is also essential in the context of high-throughput analyses as, with the current protocol and standard liquid-handling robots, 2 people can easily process up to 50 plates a week. Currently, we routinely screen 30 plates a week, which allows a whole-genome screen to be conducted once in less than 2 months.
One interesting feature of this protocol is the fact that it uses solid agar, allowing assays that cannot be performed in liquid culture. As worm physiology differs depending on the culture conditions 20,21, being able to perform assays on solid medium can also complement usual liquid-based screens. For certain phenotypes (e.g. movement), the analysis can be carried out directly with 96-well solid medium plates. For the current screen, however, as the Biosort cannot sample from solid medium plates, worms are first transferred to liquid before freezing. On the other hand, the COPAS Biosort permits a multiparametric quantitative analysis compatible with the measurement of many different phenotypes. It is likely that for any given screen not all the measured parameters will be the primary read-out. Nevertheless, these measurements can be useful for several reasons. They allow one to determine whether the assay ran correctly. For example, one can check on the number and size of worms in each well. Only where an RNAi clone should block growth or reproduction should there be a deviation from the expected values. Wells with less than 20 worms or/and animals 30% smaller (TOF) compared to a standard control with no effect on growth (e.g. gfp(RNAi)) can be excluded from subsequent analyses. The function of these clones can be addressed using an alternative protocol wherein worms are exposed to the RNAi bacteria after their development is well advanced 15. The different parameters can also be used to refine candidate gene (hit) selection, for example, limiting hits only to those that affect green fluorescence but not red. The precise method chosen for selecting hits will depend on the type of screen and its exact read-out. Given the complexity of the data generated from a quantitative genome-wide screen, collaboration with a statistician may be required.
The protocol we describe can be readily adapted to other types of assays. For example, at the infection step D. coniospora could be replaced by any other pathogen able to infect on solid media. This is potentially useful as we have found that many of the virulence factors important for Serratia marcescens infection in liquid culture do not play a role during infection on solid medium (E. Pradel, personal communication). The protocol is also fully compatible with tests of chemicals compounds 22-24, or to identify compounds with bioactivity using different libraries of bacteria 25, so should find a general utility in the C. elegans research community.
The authors have nothing to disclose.
We thank D. Braendle, C. L. Kurz and F. Montañana-Sanchis for their contributions. This project was supported by grants from the ANR and the Conseil Regional PACA, and institutional funding from INSERM and the CNRS.
Name of the reagent | Company | Catalogue number | Comments |
BactoAgar | BD Diagnostic Systems | 214010 | |
Ampicillin | Sigma-Aldrich | A9518 | |
BactoPeptone | BD Diagnostic Systems | 211677 | |
CaCl2 | Any supplier | ||
AeraSeal adhesive film | Dutscher | 760214 | |
Isopropyl β-d-Thiogalactopyranoside (IPTG) | Thermo Scientific | AB-0481 | |
K2HPO4 | Any supplier | ||
KH2PO4 | Any supplier | ||
MgSO4 | Any supplier | ||
NaCl | Any supplier | ||
Na2HPO4 | Any supplier | ||
NaOH | Any supplier | ||
96 deep well plate | Thermo Scientific | AB-0932 | |
96 well flat plate | FALCON | 353072 | |
96 well round plate | FALCON | 353077 | |
Tetracycline | Sigma-Aldrich | T8032 | |
Triton X-100 | Any supplier | ||
TECAN robot | TECAN | ||
Liquidator96TM | RAININ | ||
COPAS Biosort | Union Biometrica | ||
LIMS | Modul-Bio |