Here we describe a novel preparation for imaging live lanceolate sensory terminals of palisade endings that innervate mouse ear skin hair follicles during staining and destaining with styryl pyridinium dyes.
A novel dissection and recording technique is described for optical monitoring staining and de-staining of lanceolate terminals surrounding hair follicles in the skin of the mouse pinna. The preparation is simple and relatively fast, reliably yielding extensive regions of multiple labeled units of living nerve terminals to study uptake and release of styryl pyridinium dyes extensively used in studies of vesicle recycling. Subdividing the preparations before labeling allows test vs. control comparisons in the same ear from a single individual. Helpful tips are given for improving the quality of the preparation, the labeling and the imaging parameters. This new system is suitable for assaying pharmacologically and mechanically-induced uptake and release of these vital dyes in lanceolate terminals in both wild-type and genetically modified animals. Examples of modulatory influences on labeling intensity are given.
Mechanosensory nerve endings are typically small, diffusely distributed and difficult to access in situ, as they are usually buried deep in the skin or other surrounding tissues. Visualizing them, therefore, usually requires sectioning followed by a prolonged immunolabeling/staining period, or the delay and expense of obtaining mouse lines with genetic expression of fluorescent labels such as green or yellow fluorescent protein (GFP/YFP)1. Here we show a convenient tissue and a quick and simple method to gain access to large numbers of hair follicle afferents for study, and how they can be quickly labeled for optical monitoring of terminal function2. With practice, the whole technique from dissection to imaging can be completed in as little as 2 hr.
The lanceolate terminals of sensory axons innervating hair follicles in mammals form palisades around the epithelium of the hair-follicle, with each terminal sandwiched between glial/Schwann cell processes2-4. The purpose of the terminals is to detect mechanical displacement of the hairs they surround. They are a mixture of rapidly and slowly adapting endings, but they predominantly produce short bursts of activity in response to hair movement. Typically, the firing stops very quickly when movement ceases, even in the presence of continued displacement.
This murine pinna model for studying lanceolate terminals by optical methods has many advantageous features for studying the structure and function of these endings. The pinna is predominantly two layers of skin apposed back-to-back, with only a small amount of cartilage tissue between. The skin is very thin and easily dissected due to minimal amounts of weakly adhesive connective tissue relative to other regions of the body. The easily separated skin layers, therefore, give good access to the follicles and terminals. The innervation is easily accessible and identifiable. The hair follicles are more sparsely distributed than in other skin regions, facilitating the imaging of individual or small groups of follicles. The thin underlying dermal layer gives good accessibility to dyes and pharmacological drugs, so is ideal for imaging by fluorescence microscopy without further processing. The imaging of labeled terminals can either be of living terminals or, if using a fixable dye analogue, after fixation and further histological processing.
We have used this preparation to show that membrane recycling occurs in the lanceolate endings, evidenced by uptake (endocytosis) and release (exocytosis) of a styryl pyridinium dye (FM1-43; N-(3-triethylammoniumpropyl)-4-(4-(dibutylamino) styryl) pyridinium dibromide). The dye does not, however, seem to significantly label the investing Schwann cell processes2. We also showed that this dye uptake/release, and hence membrane recycling, is subject to glutamatergic modulation through an atypical (phospholipase D-coupled) metabotropic glutamate receptor. The outcomes of simple stimulation and analysis protocols are illustrated, and common potential analysis issues are also highlighted.
These methods were used in the research reported in Banks, R.W. et al.2 Mice were humanely euthanised by cervical dislocation. In the UK, this is a legally approved Schedule 1 method listed in the Animals (Scientific Procedures) Act, 1986 and European Directive 2010/63/EU. This federal legislation is enforced locally at the University of Aberdeen by the Animal Welfare and Ethical Review Board who have approved all procedures.
1. Preparing Ears for Labeling
2. Lanceolate Terminal Labeling
NOTE: The following protocol is optimized for styryl pyridinium dye. Other, chemically similar, styryl pyridinium dyes should work, perhaps after some adjustment in concentration and incubation time. Wear gloves and a lab coat when handling dye solutions. Either buy 10 mM stock dye solution directly from the manufacturer or prepare stock by dissolving the dye powder in saline without glucose. Aliquot (10 µl is usually convenient, but adjust this for large scale experiments) and store frozen for up to 6 months at -20 °C or ~1 year at -80 °C. Powder will store for at least 2 years. Avoid repeated freeze/thaw cycles of dye solutions; this rapidly denatures the dye. Once defrosted, store at 4 °C and use within 1 week.
3. Imaging Labeled Lanceolate Endings.
NOTE: The observer should be dark-adapted for the following imaging steps. The increased visual acuity this affords means lower excitation light levels are required to find the follicles for imaging. This is most important for minimising phototoxicity rather than reducing the inconvenience of photobleaching. Free radicals generated by full intensity illumination can rapidly (within 60 sec) kill living nerve terminals (G.S. Bewick, S. Fadul and W.J. Betz, unpublished observations).
4. Analyzing Labeled Lanceolate Endings.
Note: The following procedure is a rapid method for analyzing terminal intensity.
The hair follicles in this pinna preparation are easily seen under transillumination without fluorescence (Figure 1A), illustrating the wafer-thin nature of the preparation and the relative ease of accessibility it affords to these mechanosensory terminals. Each is typified by the prominent hair shaft base piercing the dark crescent of the sebaceous gland. Under epifluorescence, the labeled lanceolate terminals surrounding each hair follicle are clearly seen and show the typically robust spontaneous styryl dye uptake (Figure 1B). This occurs without imposed movement. The lanceolate terminals are seen to encircle the hair shaft, although the extent of encirclement is variable6. Much of the labeling is punctate (spots) rather than the linear arrangement that might be expected. The punctate pattern reflects terminals being observed in an optical plane along the length of the terminal. This preparation received no further processing for visualization after labeling, it was simply transferred to a microscope stage and imaged in situ, which again illustrates the simplicity of this preparation.
Example experiments to which this novel preparation is suited are shown in Figure 3. It can be used to study both endocytosis and exocytosis in living terminals, as well as their modulation. Thus, for endocytosis, glutamate receptor agonists can increase the labeling intensity, while blocking Ca2+ channels with ligands or cations such as Mg2+, Ni2+ or Cd2+ decreases it2. Alternatively, this preparation can also be used to study the kinetics of exocytosis, as shown in Figure 3C. First, a labeled terminal is seen de-staining spontaneously. However, this destain is accelerated by the exocytosis stimulant, latrotoxin. More details of the experimental outcomes can be seen in Banks, R.W. et al.2.
Figure 1. Robust Styryl Dye Labeling Recorded in the Mouse Pinna. (A) Part of an unlabeled pinna preparation in bright field illumination, showing how clearly hair follicles appear in areas cleared of overlying areolar/adipose tissues. The dark, usually bilobed, crescent shapes are sebaceous glands surrounding the central hair shaft. (B) A similar area, at a slightly higher magnification and imaged with epifluorescence, showing lanceolate endings labeled with styryl dye. Scale bars – 40 µm. Please click here to view a larger version of this figure.
Figure 2. Analysis of Styryl Dye Labeling Intensity. (A) Typical circular pattern of hair follicle labeling with styryl dye, centered on the hair shaft (not visible in this image). (B) The main analysis 'region of interest' (ROI) is defined by a standard annulus superimposed onto the position of the palisade of lanceolate nerve endings encircling the follicle. This ROI is kept constant in shape and area for any single experiment to ensure labeling intensity can be fairly compared between preparations and across all treatments. Net intensity of each ROI is calculated by subtracting the intensity of an adjacent square or circular background region (~400 µm2). Again, this square background region is kept constant in shape and area throughout any given experiment. Please click here to view a larger version of this figure.
Figure 3. Labeling Intensity of Hair Follicle Afferent Lanceloate Endings is not Normally Distributed, and can be Used to Examine Both Endo- and Exocytosis. Typical data from styryl dye intensity measurements in spontaneously labeled lanceolate terminals using the analysis method described above. (A) Labeling intensity under control conditions (54 follicles, 4 ears) and 1 mM glutamate (42 follicles, 4 ears). The intensity values of individual endings are displayed as cluster dot plots. Each point represents the intensity of one terminal palisade around a follicle. Note that even under control conditions a few data points (follicles) are extremely intense, while most are clustered at lower intensities. The first dot at a particular intensity is plotted at the center and subsequent data points of the same intensity are plotted progressively more laterally on either side. Thus, lateral spread represents the frequency of follicles of any particular labeling intensity. The horizontal lines represent median ± 25% interquartile range. Incubation with 1 mM glutamate enhances the median intensity by ~50% (***P<0.001, Mann-Whitney), but labeling can be enhanced by 200 – 300% in some terminals. (B) Images demonstrating glutamate-mediated enhanced dye uptake (endocytosis). Incubation of the hair follicle preparation in glutamate (1 mM) markedly increases styryl dye uptake, as shown by the increased labeling intensity. Scale bar 20 µm. (C) Enhancing dye release (exocytosis). After labeling, styryl dye is spontaneously released again, as the labeling at 0 min is clearly brighter than at 60 min, even after background subtraction to control for photobleaching. This release is greatly potentiated by latrotoxin, a black widow spider venom constituent, which triggers uncontrolled vesicle exocytosis. After 60 min in toxin, terminal labeling is almost undetectable. This reversibility of styryl dye labeling supports the hypothesis that terminal fluorescence is due to internalization during local recycling of synaptic-like vesicles. Scale bar 20 µm. Please click here to view a larger version of this figure.
Bewick and Betz originally developed the N-(3-triethylammoniumpropyl)-4-(4-(dibutylamino) styryl) pyridinium dibromide-related styryl pyridinium dyes7-10 to monitor local recycling of synaptic vesicle membrane. Dye uptake, and hence increased fluorescence, therefore reflects synaptic vesicle membrane internalization (endocytosis). Subsequently, this internalized dye can be re-released by further electrical activity, showing dye loss monitors vesicle membrane externalization (exocytosis). In synapses, this is a proxy for neurotransmitter secretion. At the same time, we also found these dyes label primary mechanosensory nerve endings7. More recently11, Bewick, Banks and colleagues then showed that this reflects a similar process in mature, differentiated mechanosensory terminals ex vivo. Here again, the dyes label 50 nm diameter 'synaptic-like' vesicles (SLVs) that recycle constitutively to release glutamate. In mechanosensory terminals, unlike their synaptic counterparts, this recycling is primarily spontaneous. It is also modulated by mechanical, rather than simply electrical, stimulation.
For sensory neurons in culture and in cochlea hair cells, styryl dyes in general and styryl pyridinium dye in particular have been shown to pass through the mechanosensory channels, blocking the mechanosensory channels and irreversibly labeling internal membranes12. However, at comparable styryl dye concentrations in differentiated mechanosensory terminals in situ, as here in lanceolate endings2, or in Ia endings in muscle spindles11, and in hair cells that are not mechanically stimulated13, 14, labeling is by membrane endocytosis. In mechanosensory nerve terminals, for instance, labeling is reversible and does not block the mechanosensory responses at the concentrations used here2, 11, 15. While some dye internalization by channel permeation in these endings cannot be completely ruled out, the near total destain with latrotoxin indicates the great majority of the labeling in mature terminals is by internalization with recycling vesicle membrane. We have, therefore, used this technique to study the activity dependence11 and, most recently, the pharmacology2 of SLV recycling in mechanosensory afferent terminals by examining drug effects on the uptake and release of the dyes.
As with most practical techniques, reproducibility requires repetition and practice. Some of the key points for ensuring reliability will now be discussed. Lanceolate labeling in younger animals is more reliable – the smallest animal we have used was 15 g body weight. It is not entirely clear why this is the case, but it may be because dissection of the younger connective tissue requires less mechanical trauma and leaves less remaining residue when removing the tissues overlying the innervation layer.
Overall, the tissue preparation is quite simple, with peeling the skin layers apart being the most technically challenging practical aspect and then only in older mice. In these, the skin layers adhere strongly together at the base where the dissection starts, but even here separation of the layers becomes much easier towards the margins. Thankfully, or perhaps consequently, these thinner marginal skin areas usually give the most satisfactory labeling, as does the anterior skin generally. Therefore, particularly avoid grasping the very thin skin at the margins. To minimize the risk of damage, manipulate preparations indirectly by pushing with closed forceps rather than grasping directly, or if essential grasp only tougher tissues unlikely to be labeled. Be thorough in removing the 'sheet polystyrene' layer immediately overlying the follicles, as this is the main mechanical obstruction to imaging and drug access. However, it is essential to minimize physical contact with underlying structures as this damages (i.e., strips away) the neural networks and terminals just below. If the predominant fluorescence is yellow/white in the sebaceous glands, prominent auto-fluorescence of the hair shaft bases and few crescents of orange/yellow lanceolate endings, this indicates the nerve plexus layer and associated lanceolate terminals have been removed during clearance. This appears to be the main problem with older (>30 g) mice. Throughout the staining procedures, ensure everything is at 30 °C and well-oxygenated. Be aware that labeled terminals are still alive. Consequently, dye will be secreted by ongoing spontaneous (constitutive) exocytic release. This will be slower at R/T, but it is good practice to minimize the delay between the removal of chelator solution and imaging, to minimize dye loss. Moreover, for between-groups comparative studies of intensity, it is essential to ensure imaging of all groups is time-matched. Use of a dye-chelating agent before imaging greatly improves image contrast. So, while relatively expensive, the chelation step is quite important for ensuring good image quality. Chelator use can be minimized by reusing the solution multiple times, and even on 2 – 3 consecutive days, if stored at 4 °C between uses. Discard the chelator solution once it goes noticeably pink, showing its dye sequestration is approaching saturation.
During imaging, be aware of the potential for phototoxic damage to these living terminals, which is a cumulative result of both the intensity and the exposure time of the excitation light. This consideration is less important for single timepoint images, where image quality is the primary concern. However, it is crucial during repeated imaging in kinetics studies to reduce excitation light exposure to a minimum. While developing these dyes to label synapses, we found excitation for >1 min at full power excitation illumination will cause dramatic and irreparable damage to nerve terminals. They first subsequently expand hugely, then collapse completely over a period of ~15 min. We did not systematically test the relative contributions of exposure time and intensity, but these observations suggest the guiding principle should be to minimize both. So, it is recommended that excitation light intensity and duration are the minimum commensurate with getting good images, and appropriate control images are taken in time-course studies. To test that the data are not affected by phototoxicity under repeated imaging conditions, at each time point take an additional image of a previously unviewed terminal. This is to ensure the behavior of the labeling in naive terminals resembles that in follicles being imaged repeatedly.
A number of factors can reduce the within-group variability of the net intensity data. Accurate placement of the ROIs, particularly the background ROI, is important, as even small areas of inappropriate staining can greatly affect between-follicle data variability. The variability of net intensity is also influenced by how completely each hair follicle is encircled by the palisade of endings. Compare for example, the crescent shaped labeling distribution in Figure 1B with the almost completely circular pattern seen in Figure 2. More complex analysis, perhaps using automated software detection and thresholding, are necessary if the degree of encirclement is a relevant parameter. Please note that the intensity distributions for even the most accurately analyzed follicle groups are not normally distributed (see Figure 3), necessitating the use of non-parametric statistics for between-treatment comparisons of population medians rather than means. Normalization techniques, such as expressing intensities as a percentage of contralateral control, or of a control group made up of several preparations, can be applied to further reduce variability. The final technical item to be considered is the experimental design for pharmacological testing. During pharmacological investigations, pre-incubate the preparation in drug solution for 30 min before dye application. Then, maintain the drug concentration in the dye solution. In controls, use either saline or, if the drug is dissolved in a vehicle, saline plus vehicle.
The present article demonstrates how this new pinna preparation offers high quality images of mechanosensory endings in skin with minimal preparation. We also show it can be used to examine the pharmacology of two critical aspects of vesicle recycling. We show first that a glutamate receptor agonist can increase dye internalization (a marker of endocytosis), and second, that dye is lost again with latrotoxin (a stimulant of exocytosis). The significance of this preparation and technique is that it offers excellent access to living skin mechanosenory terminals in situ for imaging experiments, affording unique opportunities for optical monitoring of terminal function, structure and their inter-relationships. To this latter end, we have also developed it further for use in combined optical/electrophysiological studies (see sister JoVE article for details).
The authors have nothing to disclose.
The work was funded by UK Medical Research Council project grant G0601253 to G.S.B. and R.W.B. and a SULSA Bioskape grant to G.S.B.
PDMS – Sylgard 184 | Dow Corning | Flexible, inert, translucent solid silicone polymer. | |
No. 3 Dumont forceps | Fine Science Tools | 11231-20 | |
Austerlitz Insect pins | Fine Science Tools | 26002-10 | Very fine pins to attach pinna preparation securely to the PDMS with minimal damage. |
FM1-43/Synaptogreen C4 | Biotium/Cambridge Bioscience | BT70020 | Fluorescent membrane probe that reversibly partitions into the outer leaflet of cell membranes. Used predominantly for monitoring vesicle membrane endo-/exocytosis. |
Advasep 7 | Biotium/Cambridge Bioscience | BT70029 | A sulfonated b-cyclodextrin derivative that chelates FM1-43 (& other styryl pyridinium dyes) out of the exposed membranes, leaving internalised dye to be seen more clearly by lowering the background labelling/fluorescence. |
Retiga Exi Fast 1394 | Qimaging | Monochrome, cooled CCD camera – basic model | |
Volocity 3D Image Analysis Software | Perkin Elmer | Volocity 6.3 | Image capture and analysis software. |