Summary

Biosensing Motor Neuron Membrane Potential in Live Zebrafish Embryos

Published: June 26, 2017
doi:

Summary

Protocols described here allow for the study of the electrical properties of excitable cells in the most non-invasive physiological conditions by employing zebrafish embryos in an in vivo system together with a fluorescence resonance energy transfer (FRET)-based genetically encoded voltage indicator (GEVI) selectively expressed in the cell type of interest.

Abstract

The protocols described here are designed to allow researchers to study cell communication without altering the integrity of the environment in which the cells are located. Specifically, they have been developed to analyze the electrical activity of excitable cells, such as spinal neurons. In such a scenario, it is crucial to preserve the integrity of the spinal cell, but it is also important to preserve the anatomy and physiological shape of the systems involved. Indeed, the comprehension of the manner in which the nervous system-and other complex systems-works must be based on a systemic approach. For this reason, the live zebrafish embryo was chosen as a model system, and the spinal neuron membrane voltage changes were evaluated without interfering with the physiological conditions of the embryos.

Here, an approach combining the employment of zebrafish embryos with a FRET-based biosensor is described. Zebrafish embryos are characterized by a very simplified nervous system and are particularly suited for imaging applications thanks to their transparency, allowing for the employment of fluorescence-based voltage indicators at the plasma membrane during zebrafish development. The synergy between these two components makes it possible to analyze the electrical activity of the cells in intact living organisms, without perturbing the physiological state. Finally, this non-invasive approach can co-exist with other analyses (e.g., spontaneous movement recordings, as shown here).

Introduction

In vivo systemic component analysis allows scientists to investigate cellular behavior in the most reliable way. This is particularly true when the activity under scrutiny is heavily influenced by cell-cell interactions (both contact- and non-contact-dependent), as in the nervous system, where membrane voltage changes drive the communication among excitable cells. The comprehension of the information encoded by these electrical signals is the key to understanding the way the nervous system works in both physiological and disease states.

In order to study cell electrical properties in the most non-invasive physiological conditions, several genetically encoded voltage indicators have been recently developed1. As opposed to the previous generations of optical voltage sensors (mainly voltage-sensitive dyes)2, GEVIs allow for in vivo analyses of the intact neural system, and their expression can be limited to specific cell types or populations.

The zebrafish embryo is the in vivo "substrate" of choice to take advantage of the great potential attributed to GEVIs. In fact, thanks to its optical clarity and its simplified yet evolutionarily conserved nervous system, the zebrafish model allows for the straightforward identification and manipulation of every cellular component in a network. Indeed, the employment of the FRET-based GEVI Mermaid3 led to the identification of pre-symptomatic alterations in spinal motor neuron behavior in a zebrafish model of amyotrophic lateral sclerosis (ALS)4.

The following in vivo protocol describes how to monitor the electrical properties of spinal motor neurons in intact zebrafish embryos expressing Mermaid in a neuronal-specific manner. Moreover, it demonstrates how pharmacologically induced changes in such electrical properties can be associated with alterations in the frequency of embryonic spontaneous coilings, the stereotypic motor activity that characterizes the movement behavior of the zebrafish at very early stages of development.

Protocol

1. pHuC_Mermaid Plasmid Generation NOTE: Mermaid is a biosensor developed by pairing the voltage-sensing domain (VSD) of the Ciona intestinalis (now Ciona robusta)5 voltage sensor containing phosphatase (Ci-VSP) with the FRET partner fluorophores Umi-Kinoko Green (mUKG: donor) and a monomeric version of the orange-emitting fluorescent protein Kusabira Orange (mKOk: acceptor). For this biosensor, conformational changes of the VSD domain, induced …

Representative Results

An expression vector carrying the FRET-based Mermaid biosensor coding sequence under the control of the pHuC pan-neuronal promoter, which drives the synthesis of the protein exclusively in the nervous system, was delivered into single-cell fertilized eggs by means of a microinjection in order to obtain transient transgenic embryos (Figure 1, left panel). After mastering the microinjection technique, the percentage of Mermaid-positive embryos was close to …

Discussion

The protocol presented here allowed us to explore the association between the electrical properties of zebrafish embryo spinal motor neurons and the spontaneous coiling behavior, the earliest stereotypic motor activity, which appears around 17 hpf of embryonic development and lasts until 24 hpf10.

Our approach provides researchers with a tool to study the neural system of intact embryos, fully preserving the complexity of the interactions between cells in a developing f…

Offenlegungen

The authors have nothing to disclose.

Acknowledgements

The authors would like to thank Simona Rodighiero for her priceless support with the FRET imaging analysis.

Materials

Low Melting Point Agarose  Sigma-Aldrich A9414
DMSO  Sigma-Aldrich W387520
Riluzole Sigma-Aldrich R116
Pfu Ultra HQ DNA polymerase  Agilent Technologies – Stratagene Products Division 600389
T3 Universal primer  Sigma-Aldrich
Wizard SV Gel and PCR Clean-Up system Promega A9280
Universal SmaI primer  Eurofins
StrataClone Mammalian Expression Vector System / pCMV-SC blunt vector  Agilent Technologies – Stratagene Products Division  240228
SmaI  New England Biolabs R0141S
T4 DNA ligase Promega M1801
SalI New England Biolabs R0138S
EcoRV New England Biolabs R0195S
35 mm, glass-bottomed imaging dish  Ibidi 81151
forceps Sigma-Aldrich F6521
Stereomicroscope Leica Microsystems M10 F
Digital camera Leica Microsystems DFC 310 FX
Leica Application Suite 4.7.1 software  Leica Microsystems
QuickTime Player, v10.4 Apple
Confocal microscope (inverted) Leica Microsystems TCS SP5
Microinjector  Eppendorf  Femtojet
ImageJ macro Biosensor_FRET 
GraphPad Prism 6.0c  GraphPad Software, Inc

Referenzen

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Benedetti, L., Ghilardi, A., Prosperi, L., Francolini, M., Del Giacco, L. Biosensing Motor Neuron Membrane Potential in Live Zebrafish Embryos. J. Vis. Exp. (124), e55297, doi:10.3791/55297 (2017).

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