Somitogenesis is a rhythmic developmental process that spatially patterns the body axis of vertebrate embryos. Previously, we developed transgenic zebrafish lines that use fluorescent reporters to observe the cyclic genes that drive this process. Here, we culture dispersed cells from these lines and image their oscillations over time in vitro.
Segmentation is a periodic and sequential morphogenetic process in vertebrates. This rhythmic formation of blocks of tissue called somites along the body axis is evidence of a genetic oscillator patterning the developing embryo. In zebrafish, the intracellular clock driving segmentation is comprised of members of the Her/Hes transcription factor family organized into negative feedback loops. We have recently generated transgenic fluorescent reporter lines for the cyclic gene her1 that recapitulate the spatio-temporal pattern of oscillations in the presomitic mesoderm (PSM). Using these lines, we developed an in vitro culture system that allows real-time analysis of segmentation clock oscillations within single, isolated PSM cells. By removing PSM tissue from transgenic embryos and then dispersing cells from oscillating regions onto glass-bottom dishes, we generated cultures suitable for time-lapse imaging of fluorescence signal from individual clock cells. This approach provides an experimental and conceptual framework for direct manipulation of the segmentation clock with unprecedented single-cell resolution, allowing its cell-autonomous and tissue-level properties to be distinguished and dissected.
The periodic formation of segments along the vertebrate body axis, or somitogenesis, is evidence of a spatial and temporal oscillator in the developing embryo. The favored mechanism controlling somitogenesis is conceptually described by a "clock and wavefront" model 1, wherein the "clock" consisting of cellular oscillators, now thought to be intracellularly driven by the rhythmic expression of a set of cyclic genes2, ticks off the formation of somites from the presomitic mesoderm (PSM). As the embryo develops, a maturation "wavefront" in the PSM moves in concert with the regressing tissue towards the posterior, slowing and arresting cellular oscillators as it passes 3. Together, this spatiotemporally dynamic system is termed the segmentation clock. Current approaches to study the segmentation clock span three increasing levels of organization from the genetic oscillator in single cells to local coupling that occurs between cells and finally to global regulation of positional information in the collective PSM tissue 4.
Previous studies suggest the cell-autonomous segmentation oscillator in zebrafish consists of genes and protein products from the her/hes transcription factorfamily, which are thought to form a negative feedback loop through transcriptional repression 5-7. The Delta/Notch signaling pathway synchronizes oscillations between neighboring cells and regulates the collective period of the population 8-10. Fgf signaling molecules produced in the tailbud appear to build a gradient across the zebrafish PSM, and are thereby hypothesized to contribute to slowing and arresting oscillating cells in the anterior 11. Until now, the functional roles of each of these molecules in somitogenesis have been investigated by genetic mutation, morpholino injection, heat-shock over-expression, and antagonist drug treatment of clock components and signaling between cells5,7,10,12 . Using these perturbations, segmentation clock function has been inferred from tissue-level descriptions of somite defects and the loss of uniform oscillations in expression of cyclic genes like her1, her7, and deltaC. However, nearly all of these data are from fixed embryos and fail to accurately capture changes that are inherent to the dynamic function of the segmentation clock. More recently, multiple-embryo time-lapse imaging has revealed the first mutants with altered oscillator period, but these observations were also made at the tissue level 7,13 . Thus, behavior of the hypothesized cell-autonomous oscillator during somitogenesis has not been observed.
Static snapshots of somitogenesis give an incomplete picture because, inherently, the process is driven by an oscillatory system. Earlier work in mouse and chick cells showed that levels of transcript and protein rise and fall, but sampling an approximately 2 hr oscillation every 30 or 45 min necessarily restricts the data collected and therefore the conclusions that can be drawn14,15 . Study of other biological oscillators, most notably, circadian clocks, has moved away from staged measurements of gene and protein expression to real-time monitoring using fluorescent and bioluminescent reporters 16,17. These tools are essential for demonstrating clock properties of single cells 18. A bioluminescent reporter of the Hes1 cyclic gene has been developed and briefly characterized in single mouse PSM cells 19. The average period and variance were calculated for a small number of cells, showing that oscillations persist for several cycles in vitro. However, these studies did not quantitatively address the stability and robustness of oscillator frequency and amplitude, whether cells can spontaneously enter or exit oscillations, and how the cells maintain their phase relations. Additionally, the effects of signaling molecules found in the embryo on the cell-autonomous clock have not been directly tested. Consequently, these fundamental properties of the single cell oscillator remain completely unknown.
We have recently developed transgenic fish lines using BAC recombineering 20 to drive Venus (YFP) fluorescence reporters of her1 expression30. Such lines exploit the regulatory cues of the intact chromosomal locus in which they are embedded and recapitulate the temporal dynamics and spatial pattern of her1. This breakthrough allows for real-time monitoring of gene expression in the developing zebrafish embryo in vivo. To study the fundamental properties of cell-autonomous oscillations and how such expression is regulated over time, we recently developed a reliable method to isolate and record from PSM cells in vitro. This protocol describes how we have utilized our transgenic reporter lines to generate dispersed cell cultures, from which we can characterize the oscillations of the zebrafish segmentation clock in single cells. We can thereby tackle outstanding questions in the field that were not accessible with static or tissue-level analysis, as well as directly manipulate the segmentation clock at the single cell level with signaling molecules and inhibitors.
1. Before Dissection
2. PSM Dissection and Dispersal
3. Imaging of Dispersed PSM cells
4. Image Processing of Acquired Time-lapse Movies
This protocol produces cultures of viable, dispersed, single PSM cells for time-lapse imaging of fluorescence signal (Figure 2). Our transgene generates a reporter whose cycle of production and degradation occurs with similar dynamics to the endogenous gene and protein in the embryo, on the order of half an hour. Due to its fast turnover, the YFP signal in single cells should be detected quickly to minimize bleaching and with a high temporal resolution to capture the features of each oscillatory cycle. Also, given the relative dimness of the signal, culture and acquisition conditions have been carefully tuned to ensure sensitive and robust results. We have found the following factors to be important in generating optimal PSM cell cultures for imaging: 1. An ECM substrate used for coating the glass-bottom culture dishes. 2. Addition of serum to the dissection and imaging medium. 3. Dissection of PSM from identified embryos taken after mating heterozygous pairs, whose offspring potentially carry 2 copies of the transgene. 4. Image acquisition within an optimal magnification range, using a higher NA objective to ensure efficient capture of the fluorescence signal. 5. Illumination with a solid-state light source to minimize intensity fluctuations that could contribute to background noise. 6. Signal detection with a highly sensitive EM-CCD camera to maximize signal readout.
Sub-optimal cultures will contain cells that do not remain rounded and healthy throughout the recording. We hypothesized that our ECM substrate, a fragment of zebrafish fibronectin1 keeps cells in an undifferentiated PSM-like state, in comparison to other commonly used substrates like poly-lysine or laminin. Other substrates we tested caused cells to flatten on the glass and the loss of oscillating fluorescent signal over the course of the recording. We also found that the addition of serum to the medium during dissection, dispersal, and recording was not only important to quench the trypsin used for dissociation, but also increased fluorescence intensity over background, likely due to improved cell viability. To ensure optimal signal capture from single cells we used a 40x objective specifically designed for fluorescence imaging (Zeiss Plan NeoFluor series) with a high NA. We also found that a solid-state light source provided more stable illumination than traditional mercury lamps, which is critical to minimize background fluctuations that contribute to noisy images. These modifications are important to ensure robust results.
Using this protocol we expect cultures in which the majority of cells in a given field are fluorescent at some point during the recording. We find that fluorescent cells typically remain rounded and are sometimes quite motile during recordings. A few cells, including fluorescent cells, may become apoptotic during the recording. These cells are excluded from any analysis. We also exclude cells that come into contact with other cells or move outside of the field of view. On average, we see a 12% reduction in cell number per field by the end of the 10 hr recording as measured by counting the number of healthy cells in the transmitted light channel. This loss includes both cell death and cells that have moved out of the field. Given these caveats we can, on average, track 5 fluorescent cells per field that remain viable and visible, and typically record 6 fields per condition. For example, an experiment with 4 conditions will have 24 total fields acquired and typically about 30 tracked cells per condition. Under standard imaging conditions with L15 medium containing 10% fetal bovine serum, we find that PSM cells (n=101 cells from 4 experimental replicates) can produce between 2 and 7 peaks, with the mean and standard deviation of 3±1 peaks (2-3 cycles). The median peak number, as well as the 25% percentile, is 2 peaks and the 75% percentile is 3 peaks. Using our semi-automated tracking and analysis, we can quickly generate fluorescence intensity over time traces for individual PSM cells, with a representative cell trace shown in Figure 2C. These raw traces can then be used to make quantitative measurements of properties of the oscillating PSM cells, such as frequency, amplitude, number of cycles, and timing of peaks.
Figure 1. Identification of transgenic embryos and schematics of their dissection. (A) Lateral view of a transgenic zebrafish embryo expressing YFP fluorescence at ~ 5-somite stage. Image is an overlay of transmitted light and fluorescence channel. Arrows indicate areas of signal starting at the tip of the tailbud, throughout the PSM, towards the last formed somite. Inset shows a schematic of the reporter transgene (for more information on its development and in vivo behavior refer to Soroldoni et al.30. (B) Schematic of lateral view of embryo prior to first cut during dissection. Dotted red line indicates the first cut made across the hindbrain, though the yolk cell just behind the tailbud. (C) Schematic view of flattened PSM following removal of yolk granules and epidermal layer, oriented along its anterior-posterior axis. Dotted red line indicates the second cut to remove the tip of the tailbud for dispersal and culture. Please click here to view a larger version of this figure.
Figure 2. Representative images and traces from a single cell in a dispersed PSM culture. (A) Montage of transmitted light images of a single PSM cell in a 6-h time-lapse recording. Note that the cell remains rounded and healthy throughout the course of the recording. (B) Corresponding montage of fluorescence images from a single PSM cell. Peaks in intensity of the cell are numbered over the course of the recording. (C) Average intensity over time measured from an ROI placed on this cell. Values are taken from every frame from a movie with a frame rate of one per 2 min using the circle interpolator plug-in and custom macro written in Fiji. Peaks in intensity are again numbered throughout the trace. Please click here to view a larger version of this figure.
To study a cellular process that takes place over the course of embryonic development, biologists typically utilize an approach in the context of the entire embryo. However, to fully understand how a single cell behaves within a developmental time frame, a method to examine and perturb individual cells in isolation is also highly beneficial. By generating dispersed PSM cell cultures using transgenic zebrafish embryos we now have a tool to directly study the cell autonomous nature of genetic oscillations in segmentation clock in a quantitative way. It is possible to measure dynamics of the oscillations in our fluorescent reporter in hundreds of cells under a variety of conditions.
The observed period of single cells in culture is longer than the somitogenesis period in the intact embryo. We observe that an intact PSM explant in culture also exhibits slower oscillations than the intact embryo (data not shown), suggesting that the longer period observed in isolated cells is not simply due to damage from dispersal. A variable period and amplitude is observed in most of our single-cell time series. The source of this variability is unknown, but should reveal important details about the segmentation clock’s pace-making circuits.
With this method we can study the genetic components of segmentation at the cellular level, and address questions that are challenging to examine in the whole embryo. For example, by controlled addition of known signaling molecules found in the developing embryo to our cultures, we can examine their effects on the single PSM cellular oscillator in a robust and reproducible assay. Our PSM culture system opens the door to a rigorous evaluation of what factors, alone, or in combination promote oscillations in these cells, what factors inhibit these oscillations, and to test the interplay between such molecules. With these tools in hand, we aim to evaluate existing models of somitogenesis that are based on published tissue-level data, as well as use results in single cells to generate predictions that can be tested in the whole embryo.
To our knowledge, this is the first zebrafish primary cell culture protocol for acute time-lapse recording of fluorescence in single cells; further development and refinement of this protocol is no doubt possible. Other protocols often use zebrafish embryos to generate stable cell lines that can be transfected with reporters and used for long-term imaging 27-29. While stable lines are useful for imaging a process that is not tied to development timing, such as the circadian clock, the question of embryonic segmentation necessitates immediate imaging while cells are still in their oscillatory, progenitor state. Once cells stop oscillating, they assume a differentiated cell fate, and when in the tissue, would be incorporated into a somite. It is possible that with the right factor or factors present in vitro we could generate PSM-like zebrafish cell culture lines that would remain oscillatory, enabling significantly longer-term observations, multiple sequential perturbations, or high-throughput screening.
We expect that this method of preparing primary cultures of dispersed cells for time-lapse imaging is well-suited for the study of any cellular process that occurs within a developmental time frame that is not approachable using stable zebrafish cell lines. The isolation of distinct cell-types at distinct developmental stages from the appropriate transgenic reporter lines, either via dissection or via FACS after embryonic dissociation, could provide the starting cells. Some optimization of culture conditions, guided by the embryonic origin of the cells, may be required. By combining this flexible and sensitive protocol with the rapidly growing collection of transgenic zebrafish lines, we hope to facilitate an in vitro developmental biology approach that is complementary to classical genetic and embryological methods.
The authors have nothing to disclose.
This work was supported by an EMBO Long-term fellowship (ABW), a National Science Foundation International Postdoctoral Research Fellowship (ABW), the Max Planck Gesellschaft (ABW, DS, JS, ACO), a DIGS-BB fellowship (AO), and the European Research Council under the European Communities Seventh Framework Programme STG-207634 (DS, ACO). We thank Ravi Desai for helpful comments on the manuscript. We would also like to thank the MPI-CBG protein expression facility for production of the zebrafish Fibronectin1 fragment, the MPI-CBG fish facility staff for care and maintenance of our fish lines and the MPI-CBG light microscopy facility for imaging support.
Name of Reagent/Material | Company | Catalog Number | Comments |
Epifluorescence microscope | Olympus | Model: SZX16 | |
Epifluorescence microscope | X-cite Illumination | Series: 120Q | |
Dissection microscope | Olympus | Model: SZX12 | |
Fine forceps no. 55 | Fine Science Tools | 11295-51 | |
Glass transfer pipettes | Assistent | 567/2 | |
35 mm plastic petri dishes | Greiner | 627102 | |
60 mm plastic petri dishes | Greiner | 628102 | |
Sylgard polymer | SASCO | 266727 | |
Manipulation tools | Made in-house | For description of manipulation tools Ref. 22 | |
Microsurgical knife | World Precision Instruments | 500249 | |
L15 medium | Invitrogen | 57322 | |
Penicillin/streptomyocin | PAA | P11-010 | |
Fetal bovine serum | Invitrogen | 257322 | |
0.05% trypsin / 0.02% EDTA | PAA | L11-004 | |
Gel loading tips | Fisher Scientific | 253188 | |
Sigmacote | Sigma Aldrich | 254589 | |
Micropipette set | Gilson International | F167300 | |
Zebrafish Fibronectin1 70 kD fragment | MPI-CBG protein facility | Generated in-house from construct based on previously published work Ref. 23-25 | |
Glass bottom imaging dishes | Mattek (single well) | P35G-1.5-14-C | |
Glass bottom imaging dishes | Greiner (CellView -multi-well) | 262502 | |
E3 medium without methylene blue | Made in-house | From The Zebrafish Book, 5th Ed. Ref. 26 | |
Plastic transfer pipettes | Ratiolab | 260011 | |
Warner heating/cooling chamber | Warner Instruments | TC-324B/344B | |
EM-CCD camera | Andor | Model: iXOn 888 | |
Wide-field fluorescence microscope with Venus filter set | Zeiss | Model: Axiovert 200M | |
Wide-field fluorescence microscope with Venus filter set | NeoFluor 40x, NA 0.75 | ||
Wide-field fluorescence microscope with Venus filter set | Lumencor Light Engine | Model: Spectra X | |
Wide-field fluorescence microscope with Venus filter set | |||
Wide-field fluorescence microscope with Venus filter set | BrightLine HC 575/15 | F39-575 |