We established the photoconvertible PSmOrange system as a powerful, straight-forward and cost inexpensive tool for in vivo cell tracking in GFP transgenic backgrounds. This protocol describes its application in the zebrafish model system.
The rapid development of transparent zebrafish embryos (Danio rerio) in combination with fluorescent labelings of cells and tissues allows visualizing developmental processes as they happen in the living animal. Cells of interest can be labeled by using a tissue specific promoter to drive the expression of a fluorescent protein (FP) for the generation of transgenic lines. Using fluorescent photoconvertible proteins for this purpose additionally allows to precisely follow defined structures within the expression domain. Illuminating the protein in the region of interest, changes its emission spectrum and highlights a particular cell or cell cluster leaving other transgenic cells in their original color. A major limitation is the lack of known promoters for a large number of tissues in the zebrafish. Conversely, gene- and enhancer trap screens have generated enormous transgenic resources discretely labeling literally all embryonic structures mostly with GFP or to a lesser extend red or yellow FPs. An approach to follow defined structures in such transgenic backgrounds would be to additionally introduce a ubiquitous photoconvertible protein, which could be converted in the cell(s) of interest. However, the photoconvertible proteins available involve a green and/or less frequently a red emission state1 and can therefore often not be used to track cells in the FP-background of existing transgenic lines. To circumvent this problem, we have established the PSmOrange system for the zebrafish2,3. Simple microinjection of synthetic mRNA encoding a nuclear form of this protein labels all cell nuclei with orange/red fluorescence. Upon targeted photoconversion of the protein, it switches its emission spectrum to far red. The quantum efficiency and stability of the protein makes PSmOrange a superb cell-tracking tool for zebrafish and possibly other teleost species.
Exponentially improving imaging techniques allow following developmental processes over time periods of up to about four consecutive days3. In zebrafish and many other animal model systems, specific cells, tissues, axonal or vascular structures are marked by transgenic green or sometimes red or yellow fluorescent proteins to facilitate visualization. However, in most transgenic lines the transgene is not specifically expressed in the cells of interest but also additional structures, which hinders the precise tracking of for instance single cells or groups of cells.
Fluorescent photoconvertible proteins are well suited for cell tracking during embryonic development. The prerequisites for the application of such proteins are a long-lived nature, a well-separated emission range upon conversion and bright fluorescence. Available photoconvertible proteins comprise those that change their emission range upon conversion such as Kaede4, KiGR5, mEos26, PS-CFP2 or Dendra27 and others which are only fluorescent when photoactivated (PAmCherry8, PAGFP9 or PATagRFP10). Their applications to track cells in existing FP-transgenic animals are however limited as they often involve a green fluorescent state or do not fulfill all of the above criteria. Only recently, Subach and colleagues reported the PSmOrange protein, which changes its emission from orange/red to far red upon photoconversion and was successfully applied in cells in culture and cultured cells injected into mice2.
To investigate the protein’s suitability for cell tracking in a living embryo, we generated an expression construct for the microinjection of nuclear-tagged H2B-PSmOrange into zebrafish embryos. We find that the protein fulfills all prerequisites for successful cell tracking in GFP transgenic backgrounds during the first 4 (and possibly more) days of zebrafish embryonic development. During this time, most of the cell migratory events are completed in fish making the PSmOrange system an excellent addition to the zebrafish toolkit.
1. H2B-PSmOrange mRNA In Vitro Transcription and mRNA Purification
2. H2B-PSmOrange mRNA Microinjection into Zebrafish Embryos
3. Embryo Embedding
4. PSmOrange Photoconversion
5. Dismount Embryo from LMA
6. Analyzing the Fate of Photoconverted PSmOrange Protein Expressing Cells
Figure 1 illustrates an example of the PSmOrange photoconversion system. The pineal complex is a conserved structure in the vertebrate dorsal diencephalon. Like in many other vertebrates, this complex consists of the pineal organ in the center of the diencephalon and the left-sided parapineal cells. Elegant but time-consuming uncaging experiments showed that parapineal cells originate in the anterior part of the pineal organ13. In tg(foxD3:GFP); tg(flh:GFP) transgenic embryos, both pineal and parapineal cells are labeled during development. To assess the suitability of the PSmOrange system we used these embryos to reproduce the reported pineal complex development. 260 pg mRNA encoding the nuclear form of PSmOrange, H2B-PSmOrange, was injected into one-cell stage double transgenic embryos to express the protein in all cell nuclei. Injected embryos were incubated at 28 °C until 24 hr post fertilization (hpf), selected for GFP and strong H2B-PSmOrange expression and embedded in LMA in a chambered coverslip system with the dorsal side oriented towards the bottom. The specimen was placed under an inverted confocal laser scanning microscope controlled by microscope imaging software and equipped with 488 nm, 561 nm and 640 nm lasers and a 20X air objective for photoconversion and tracking. Two cell clusters in the anterior part of the pineal were photoconverted and immediately imaged (Figure 1A–F). The photoconverted cells could be visualized using the 640 nm laser (far red – Figure 1C), but not with the 561 nm laser (orange/red – Figure 1B). GFP expression in these cells was initially also reduced due to photobleaching (Figure 1A, 1D, 1F). At 52 hpf GFP and H2B-PSmOrange was detected in the photoconverted H2B-PSmOrange protein expressing cells (Figure 1A'–F'). Indeed, a few of these cells formed the parapineal on the left side of the brain (arrowheads in Figure 1A'–F'). This result is consistent with previous reports on the parapineal cell origin and shows the applicability of the PSmOrange technique in the living vertebrate embryo.
Figure 1. Identifying the parapineal cell origin using the PSmOrange photoconversion system in living zebrafish embryos. (A–F') Dorsal views with anterior to the top focused on the dorsal diencephalon of a tg(foxD3:GFP); tg(flh:GFP) transgenic embryo highlighting the pineal (P) and the parapineal cells (pp) at (A–F) 26 hpf immediately after photoconversion and (A'–F') 26 hr later at 52 hpf. The embryo was injected with mRNA encoding H2B-PSmOrange. The pictures show 3D reconstructions. Expression of (A, A') transgenic GFP, (B, B') not converted H2B-PSmOrange (red channel) and (C, C') after photoconversion (far-red channel). White dotted circles highlight the area of photoconversion, which is devoid of orange/red fluorescence. (D, D') Merge of all three channels (green, red, far-red), (E, E') red and far-red channels and (F, F') green and far-red channels. (A'-F') White arrowheads highlight the location of parapineal cells, which show green, orange/red and far-red fluorescence. (A-F') The scale bar is displayed on the right bottom corner of each image. Please click here to view a larger version of this figure.
Phase | Number of Loop | Active Lasers |
Acquistion | 1 cycle | 488 nm, 561 nm, 640 nm |
Stimulation | 15 to 30 cycles | 488 nm |
Maturation | 1 min | # |
Acquistion | 1 cycle | 488 nm, 561 nm, 640 nm |
Table 1: Conditions for H2B-PSmOrange photoconversion.
Transgenic embryos carrying fluorescent reporters have helped fundamentally to understand embryonic development. However, there is still the essential need for promoters to facilitate the specific visualization of particular structures. In their absence, researchers rely on techniques such as the photoconversion of fluorescent proteins to find out about the origin and development of their structure of interest. This in turn is a crucial prerequisite to identify the molecular mechanisms involved in its development. Technical advances in the zebrafish field now allow to replace the FP in transgenic lines with, for instance, photoconvertible proteins using a CRISPR-Cas9 mediated knock in approach14,15. However, this technique is relatively time-consuming and not always successful. In contrast, the application of ubiquitously expressed H2B-PSmOrange in GFP and possibly other transgenic backgrounds is a straight-forward technique to follow cells through embryonic development.
For instance, the origin of the zebrafish ventral habenulae, one part of a conserved neural conduction system in the dorsal diencephalon of vertebrates, has been elusive until recently and hence no genetic cascade underlying its development was uncovered. Using the PSmOrange system and long-term time-lapse analysis to follow migrating cells, we could show that unlike the dorsal habenular nuclei, which originate left and right adjacent to the epiphysis, ventral habenular neurons develop posterior to this region in the thalamus3. This knowledge allowed us then to identify the crucial function of the canonical Wnt signaling downstream gene Tcf7l2 for ventral habenular neuron development.
The application of the photoconvertible PSmOrange system is simple, fast and has the advantage over photoactivatible proteins that embryos can be selected for strong protein expression before illumination. Synthetic mRNA encoding for H2B-PSmOrange is injected into the GFP-transgenic embryo to ubiquitously express the orange fluorescent protein in all nuclei. We have not encountered any side-effects upon injection and the protein is stable for at least 96 hr. The protein is then photoconverted in GFP-transgenic cells in the ROI using a 488 nm excitation laser and the embryo can be analyzed for the now far-red fluorescent protein containing cells within the subsequent approximately 48 hr. It is critical to monitor the successful photoconversion as conditions can vary depending on the developmental stage of the embryo and the tissue targeted. The microscope imaging software acquires an image of each channel (green, red and far-red) before and after photoconversion. The photoconversion efficiency can be evaluated measuring the mean intensity fluorescence in the ROI between the different channels before and after photoconversion. If no far-red fluorescence is detected immediately after photoconversion additional rounds of photoconversion have to be applied. GFP bleaching is common after photoconversion. However, the continuous translation of the transgenic fluorescent protein overcomes this problem within about 2 hr.
A custom made macro for Fiji ImageJ to ease the identification of cells co-expressing the photoconverted protein and the transgenic GFP is available3. Future establishment of stable transgenic lines expressing the H2B-PSmOrange will further simplify this procedure. It will also facilitate the analysis of developmental events after 4 days post fertilization, which might have intriguing value to research areas like tissue regeneration. In addition, the combination of maternally expressing PSmOrange transgenics and time-lapse imaging16 will be a powerful tool for investigating cell migratory events starting before gastrulation on a single cell level. Further applications may include the exchange of the H2B nuclear tag with, for instance, GAP43 to visualize cell membranes and potentially axons in the developing embryo.
One limitation of this technique is that the zygotic protein only starts to be expressed after gastrulation and is therefore not applicable to the analysis of gastrulation processes. It also has to be considered that it is rather difficult to photoconvert the protein in cells located deep in the embryo. Photoconversion settings must be adapted as the high laser power and relatively long stimulation time needed for photoconversion may result in tissue damage, which requires careful monitoring.
The authors have nothing to disclose.
We thank O. Subach for providing the original H2B-PSmOrange plasmid and our fish facility team for fish care. We are grateful to the Nikon Imaging Center at the University of Heidelberg for access to microscopy equipment and analysis software. We acknowledge the support of the Core Facility Live Cell Imaging Mannheim at the CBTM (DFG INST 91027/10-1 FUGG). This work was supported by the Excellenzcluster CellNetworks, EcTop Spatio-temporal coordination of signaling processes (EcTop 2), University of Heidelberg to C.A.B. and the Medical Faculty Mannheim of the University Heidelberg and the DFG (FOR 1036/2, 298/3-1 and 298/6-1) to M.C.
PCR Purification Kit | Qiagen | 28104 | |
mMESSAGE mMACHINE SP6 Transcription kit | Ambion | AM1340 | |
RNeasy MiniElute Cleanup kit | Qiagen | 74204 | |
Plastic Pasteur | alpha laboratories | LW4000 | |
Original H2B-PSmOrange Plasmid | Addgene | 31920 | The plasmid described in the paper is available in the Carl lab |
FemtoJet Microinjector | Eppendorf | 5247 000.013 | |
Forceps (5 Inox) | NeoLab | 2-1633 | |
Lab-Tek II Chambered #1.5 German Coverglass System | Nunc | 155382 | |
Nikon A1R+ | Nikon GmbH Germany | No Number | |
Nikon PLAN Apo λ 20x air objective | Nikon GmbH Germany | No Number | |
NIS Elements AR Software (v. 4.30.02) | Nikon GmbH Germany/Laboratory Imaging | No Number |