Summary

Microinjection for Transgenesis and Genome Editing in Threespine Sticklebacks

Published: May 13, 2016
doi:

Summary

Transgenic manipulations and genome editing are critical for functionally testing the roles of genes and cis-regulatory elements. Here a detailed microinjection protocol for the generation of genomic modifications (including Tol2-mediated fluorescent reporter transgene constructs, TALENs, and CRISPRs) is presented for the emergent model fish, the threespine stickleback.

Abstract

The threespine stickleback fish has emerged as a powerful system to study the genetic basis of a wide variety of morphological, physiological, and behavioral phenotypes. The remarkably diverse phenotypes that have evolved as marine populations adapt to countless freshwater environments, combined with the ability to cross marine and freshwater forms, provide a rare vertebrate system in which genetics can be used to map genomic regions controlling evolved traits. Excellent genomic resources are now available, facilitating molecular genetic dissection of evolved changes. While mapping experiments generate lists of interesting candidate genes, functional genetic manipulations are required to test the roles of these genes. Gene regulation can be studied with transgenic reporter plasmids and BACs integrated into the genome using the Tol2 transposase system. Functions of specific candidate genes and cis-regulatory elements can be assessed by inducing targeted mutations with TALEN and CRISPR/Cas9 genome editing reagents. All methods require introducing nucleic acids into fertilized one-cell stickleback embryos, a task made challenging by the thick chorion of stickleback embryos and the relatively small and thin blastomere. Here, a detailed protocol for microinjection of nucleic acids into stickleback embryos is described for transgenic and genome editing applications to study gene expression and function, as well as techniques to assess the success of transgenesis and recover stable lines.

Introduction

One fundamental component of understanding how biodiversity arises is determining the genetic and developmental bases of evolved phenotypic changes in nature. The threespine stickleback fish, Gasterosteus aculeatus, has emerged as an excellent model for studying the genetic basis of evolution. Sticklebacks have undergone many adaptive evolutionary changes as marine fish have colonized countless freshwater environments around the northern hemisphere, resulting in dramatic morphological, physiological, and behavioral changes1. The genomes of individuals from twenty-one stickleback populations have been sequenced and assembled, and a high density linkage map has been generated to further improve the assembly2,3. Genetic mapping experiments have identified genomic regions underlying evolved phenotypes46, and in a few cases, the functional roles of specific candidate genes have been tested7,8. A number of genomic regions underlying morphological changes have been identified with promising candidate genes, but these candidates have not yet been functionally tested912. In addition, sticklebacks are common models for studies of population genetics/genomics13,14, speciation15, behavior1, endocrinology16, ecotoxicology17, immunology18 and parasitology19. Future studies in each of these fields will benefit from the ability to perform functional genetic manipulations in sticklebacks. In addition to manipulating their coding sequences, the roles of candidate genes can be assessed by studying their cis-regulatory sequences and by functionally increasing, decreasing, or eliminating expression of the candidate gene. Microinjection and transgenesis methods in sticklebacks are well established7,8,20 and were initially developed using a meganuclease-mediated method21 first described in medaka22. The modified microinjection method presented here has been optimized for both Tol2-mediated transgenesis and recently developed genome editing reagents including TALENs and CRISPRs.

Changes to cis-regulatory elements are thought to be critical to morphological evolution, as cis-regulatory changes can avoid the negative pleiotropic consequences of coding mutations23. Therefore, testing and comparing putative cis-regulatory sequences has become a central goal of an increasing number of evolutionary studies. In addition, most human disease variants are regulatory variants24,25, and model vertebrate systems are sorely needed to study cis-regulatory element function and logic. Fish that fertilize their embryos externally in large numbers offer powerful vertebrate systems to study cis-regulation. The Tol2 transposon system, in which foreign DNA to be integrated in the genome is flanked by Tol2 transposase binding sites and co-injected with Tol2 transposase mRNA, works with high efficiency for successfully integrating plasmid constructs into fish genomes2628. Typically, a potential enhancer is cloned upstream of a basal promoter (such as hsp70l29) and fluorescent reporter gene such as EGFP (enhanced green fluorescent protein) or mCherry in a Tol2 backbone and injected with transposase mRNA26. Observation of expression of the fluorescent reporter, either in injected embryos or offspring with stably integrated transgenes, provides information about the spatiotemporal regulation of gene expression driven by the putative enhancer. In further experiments, validated enhancers can be used to drive tissue-specific overexpression of genes of interest.

For analysis of larger cis-regulatory regions, high quality large-insert genomic libraries using bacterial artificial chromosomes (BACs) have been constructed for both marine and freshwater sticklebacks30. These BACs can be recombineered to replace a gene with a fluorescent reporter gene in the context of a large (150-200 kb) genomic region31. The fluorescent reporter is then expressed in a spatiotemporal pattern as determined by regulatory sequences within the BAC. For studies in fish, Tol2 sites can be added to the BAC to facilitate genomic integration32,33. In later stages of development when in situ hybridization is technically challenging, the fluorescent readout of the BAC can be used to study patterns of gene expression, as has been shown for stickleback Bone morphogenetic protein 6 (Bmp6)20. Additionally, fluorescent expression patterns in an individual can be tracked over time, which cannot be accomplished with in situ hybridization. BACs can also be used to add an additional copy of a genomic region to increase dosage of a gene of interest.

For the study of gene function, genome editing is an explosively expanding field that can be used to produce targeted changes to genomic sequences in a wide variety of organisms34. Transcription activator-like effector nucleases (TALENs) are modular, sequence-specific nucleases originally isolated from plant pathogens that can be precisely engineered to bind directly to a genomic sequence of choice and generate a double strand break35,36. Clustered regularly interspaced short palindromic repeats (CRISPR)/CAS systems were originally found in bacteria and use a guide RNA and the Cas9 protein to generate a break in a target DNA sequence complementary to the guide37. The subsequent repair of the double strand break created by both TALENs and CRISPRs often leaves behind a small insertion or deletion, which can disrupt the function of the target sequence35-37. In sticklebacks, TALENs have been used to disrupt gene expression by targeting an enhancer20, and both TALENs and CRISPRs have successfully produced mutations in coding sequences (unpublished data). A detailed protocol for the generation of CRISPRs for use in zebrafish can be used as a guideline to develop CRISPRs for sticklebacks38.

Transgenic and genome editing experiments require introduction of nucleic acids into a newly fertilized one-cell embryo. By introducing the transgene or genome-editing tool early in development, the number of genetically manipulated daughter cells in the embryo is maximized. Injected embryos are then visually screened for fluorescence or molecularly screened for genome modifications. If cells contributing to the germline are successfully targeted, the transgene or mutation can be passed on to a subset of offspring, even when post-injection lethality is high. The mosaic fish can be outcrossed or intercrossed and their offspring screened to recover the mutant alleles or a stably integrated transgene of interest. This protocol describes methods for introducing transgenes and genome editing reagents into one-cell stickleback embryos and monitoring for successful genomic modifications.

Protocol

All fish work was approved by the Institutional Animal Care and Use Committee of the University of California-Berkeley (protocol number R330).

1. Prepare Nucleic Acids for Injection

  1. Tol2 Plasmid Transgenesis (Adapted from Fisher26).
    1. Cut 10 µg transposase plasmid (pCS-Tp)39 with 10 U NotI in supplied buffer for 1 hr at 37 °C to linearize.
      Note: Material Transfer Agreements may be required to obtain Tol2 plasmids.
    2. Extract the cut plasmid with a 25:24:1 mixture of phenol:chloroform:isoamyl alcohol and ethanol precipitate with sodium acetate according to standard protocols40. Resuspend plasmid in 50 µl RNase-free water.
      Note: Phenol-chloroform should be used in a hood and the waste must be properly disposed according to institutional guidelines.
    3. Set up a Sp6 transcription reaction according to manufacturer's instructions.
    4. Use a RNA isolation kit to clean up transcription reaction according to manufacturer's instructions; resuspend RNA in 50 µL RNase-free water.
    5. Remove a 1 µl aliquot of RNA. Heat to 65 °C for 5 min to denature secondary structures then immediately chill on ice. Freeze remaining transcription reaction at -80 °C.
    6. Run the RNA aliquot on a 1% agarose gel in 0.5x TAE (Tris base, Acetic acid, Ethylenediaminetetraacetic acid) running buffer with an RNA size standard in one lane. The expected product is 2,200 bp; discard if >5% of the total RNA appears in a smear smaller than 2,200 bp, which indicates extensive degradation (Figure 1).
    7. Quantify RNA using a spectrophotometer at 260 nm. Dilute to 350 ng/µl in RNase-free water and store 1 µl aliquots at -80 °C (good for at least two years).
    8. Clone Tol2 reporter plasmid (for example, using pT2HE8 or plasmids from the Tol2 kit41) with cis-regulatory element of interest. Briefly, PCR amplify a genomic DNA sequence of interest with primers containing restriction sites found in the plasmid, digest the PCR product and vector with the enzyme(s), ligate the insert into the vector, and transform resulting plasmid into competent E. coli40. Isolate plasmid with a kit that includes an endotoxin rinse according to manufacturer's protocol.
    9. Perform a second purification of the Tol2 plasmid with a PCR purification kit according to manufacturer's protocol. Elute in 30 µl RNase-free water.
      Note: the yield from this step may be low (sometimes under 50% of the input plasmid).
    10. Dilute plasmid to ~125 ng/µl in RNase-free water.

Figure 1
Figure 1. Transposase mRNA gel. Purified transcription reaction product (1 µl) was heated to 65 °C, chilled on ice, and run on a 1% agarose gel with 0.5x TAE running buffer at 100 V. The sizes of the RNA ladder in kilobases (kb) are indicated to the left. The full length transposase mRNA is a bright band at ~2.2 kb. A small but acceptable amount of degraded or incomplete mRNA is seen below 2.2 kb. Please click here to view a larger version of this figure.

  1. BAC Transgenesis (See Suster32,33 for BAC Recombineering Techniques)
    1. Prepare BAC from E. coli using BAC purification kit according to manufacturer's protocol. Use ethanol precipitation to recover DNA with a standard sodium acetate-ethanol extraction40 and resuspend DNA at ~250 ng/µl in RNase-free water.
    2. Prepare transposase mRNA as in section 1.1.
  2. Mutation Induction with TALENs (See Cermak35 for Design of TALENs)
    1. Use the web-based application to design TALENs for the gene of interest42. If possible, design TALENs to disrupt a restriction enzyme cut site to facilitate molecular analysis.
    2. Clone TALENs and prepare plasmids for transcription following published protocol35.
    3. Transcribe TALEN mRNA with a Sp6 transcription reaction according to manufacturer's instructions and clean up mRNA as described for transposase in section 1.1.4. Quantify with a spectrophotometer and dilute to 200 ng/µl in RNase free water. Run TALEN mRNA on a gel to ensure it is the proper size and not degraded as described in step 1.1.6.
    4. Design a pair of PCR primers to amplify approximately 100-200 bp surrounding the TALEN target sequence using a primer design tool and the target DNA sequence43. Order the appropriate restriction enzyme to test for lesions at the target site based on step 1.3.1.
  3. CRISPR Transgenesis (See Talbot and Amacher38 for Design and Preparation of CRISPRs):
    1. Design and prepare CRISPRs and Cas9 mRNA according to protocol38, and order appropriate verification primers and restriction enzymes as described in step 1.3.4.

2. Prepare Injection Reagents

  1. Use Borosilicate Capillaries to Prepare Needles as Described Below.
    Note: these capillaries are not the standard capillaries used for zebrafish microinjection, and are made of a thicker and stronger glass that is critical to puncture the tough stickleback chorion.
    1. Always wear nitrile or latex gloves when pulling needles, and do not allow needles to contact skin or skin oils.
    2. Determine micropipette pulling parameters empirically by ramp tests following the micropipette puller's manufacturer's instructions. For example, with a box filament, the following parameters were determined to be optimal: (Heat = 515, Pull = 60, Velocity = 60, Delay = 85, Pressure = 500). These settings produce a needle that tapers steeply at approximately 12° for ~2 mm and then a long extension that tapers at approximately 2° for ~6 mm (Figure 2).
      Note: The proper parameters will vary by puller and filament, and blindly using a program without determining the parameters first through ramp tests can permanently destroy the puller's filament, which is difficult and expensive to replace.
    3. Follow manufacturer's instructions to pull at least 4 micropipette needles from borosilicate glass with the settings determined in 2.1.2.
    4. Store needles vertically in capillary storage jar with the sharp end facing down.
    5. Before injecting, place capillary storage jar on ice to chill needles. Add a piece of moist paper towel to the jar to prevent evaporation once the needles are filled.
  2. Fertilize Eggs (All Steps Performed at RT)
    1. Strip egg clutch from gravid female stickleback by gently squeezing the abdomen and stroking in an anterior to posterior direction to push the eggs out through the cloaca and into a 35 x 10 mm2 Petri dish. Add a moist piece of paper towel on one side of the Petri dish (not touching the eggs) to create humidity chamber. Place lid on Petri dish so eggs stay moist.
    2. Euthanize male stickleback in 0.025% Tricaine-S buffered with 0.1% sodium bicarbonate.
    3. Cut open the abdomen, remove testes and macerate in 250 µl Hank's solution (see Westerfield44 for full protocol for Hank's solution preparation).
    4. Fertilize at most 100 eggs with 50 µl sperm solution and gently stir with pipette tip to ensure all eggs are fertilized. If the clutch is >100 eggs, fertilize half of the eggs later to ensure that all embryos are at a one-cell stage at the time of injection. Eggs can be left unfertilized at RT for up to an hour, and sperm generally lasts for 1-7 days at 4 °C in Hank's solution.
    5. Keep embryos covered with Petri dish lid after fertilization to prevent drying. Allow 20-25 min for the first cell to emerge and swell up (prepare injection materials during this time).
    6. Fill a 150 mm x 15 mm Petri dish with stickleback water. (To make stickleback water, first prepare 10% sodium bicarbonate dissolved in deionized water. Then add 3.5 g artificial seawater mix and 0.217 ml of 10% sodium bicarbonate per 1 L of deionized water, and stir/shake vigorously to dissolve salt.)
  3. Prepare Injection Solution (While Eggs are Fertilizing)
    1. Prepare injection solution according to Table 1 and store on ice.
      Note: the concentrations of some nucleic acids have been increased from those published for zebrafish due to the increased volume of the stickleback blastomere.
Reagent Tol2  injection BAC injection TALEN injection CRISPR injection
Tol2 mRNA 350 ng 350 ng 
DNA 150-200 ng plasmid 200-300 ng BAC
TALEN mRNA 200 ng each 
 CRISPR guide RNA 200 ng
Cas9 mRNA 400 ng
0.5% phenol red inDulbecco's PBS 0.5 µl 0.5 µl 0.5 µl 0.5 µl
RNAse free water to 5 µl to 5 µl to 5 µl to 5 µl

Table 1: Injection reagents. All mixtures should be prepared to a total volume on 5 µl and stored on ice.

  1. Fill Needles (On Ice; Allow At Least 10 Min for Needles to Fill).
    1. Backfill at least three needles by pipetting 0.5 µl injection solution onto the blunt top end of the needle while needles are hanging vertically in capillary storage jar. Be careful that the drop stays on top and does not drip down the side and avoid bubbles.
    2. After the red liquid has mostly drained to the pointed tip of the needle, add another 0.5 µl to the blunt end of the needle and allow it to drain.

3. Prepare Inject Rig and Needle for Microinjection

Note: These steps can usually be done after fertilizing the eggs.

  1. Turn on transillumination light for the dissecting microscope and place a ~13 cm x 13 cm glass plate on the microscope light base with 15 cm plaster saw blade on top of the glass plate7. Orient the saw perpendicular to the injection apparatus with the indentations facing towards the needle holder.
  2. Turn on air supply and ensure pressure is set to ~200 kPa from the regulator.
  3. Turn on the control box and adjust settings. Set pressure to ~150-175 kPa. Set injection duration to 180 msec.
  4. Loosen the needle holder, insert a filled needle into the holder until resistance of the rubber holder can be felt, and tighten until finger tight.
  5. Adjust the needle angle to approximately 45°.
  6. Use micromanipulator controls to adjust the needle so the end is centered in the field of view. Zoom in to ~40X magnification and focus on the tip of the needle, which should not be touching the glass below.
  7. Gently break the tip of the needle by grasping it with watchmaker's forceps. Ideally, do not break perpendicularly, but rather at a ~60° angle. Break close to the tip (not more than 2-3 forceps widths away from the end, Figure 2).

Figure 2
Figure 2. Unbroken and broken microinjection needles. The top needle is unbroken and the tip of the bottom needle has been broken with forceps (arrow). Needles are filled with a solution containing 0.05% phenol red. Scale bar = 1 mm. Please click here to view a larger version of this figure.

  1. Press the injection foot pedal several times to test whether the needle is broken. After a few taps, tiny red droplets should begin to come out of the end. If not, try breaking the needle slightly higher.
  2. If the needle has an air bubble, increase the back pressure unit and press the pedal several times quickly to work the bubble out.
  3. Adjust the Back Pressure:
    1. Use the disposable transfer pipette to place a few drops of stickleback water on the glass plate.
    2. Gently lower the needle into the water.
    3. Increase the back pressure until a faint stream of pink liquid emerges from the needle (indicating positive pressure).
      Note: If there is not enough back pressure, the needle will draw up the cytoplasm by capillary action. If there is too much back pressure, the injection volume may be inadvertently too large.
    4. Retract the needle as far as possible so that it will not be damaged while preparing the embryos (see below).
  4. Alternatively, adjust the back pressure to a higher pressure setting so that a constant strong stream of liquid exits the needle when it is submerged in water. Then, pressing the foot pedal to inject becomes unnecessary; however, the injection must be performed quickly to avoid over-injecting.
    Note: Do not attempt this technique when first learning to inject.

4. Microinjection

  1. About 25 min after fertilization, use two 10 µl pipet tips to remove 5-10 embryos from the clutch and transfer to the glass plate.
  2. Still using the pipet tips, gently separate the embryos into individual indentations of the saw blade. Use caution not to puncture embryos.
  3. Using a transfer pipet with end cut off so stickleback embryos will fit inside, add enough stickleback water to cover the embryos, leave the water on for 3-5 sec, then remove the excess water with the pipet, leaving a small volume of water coating each embryo.
    Note: Too much water will cause the chorions to harden and break the needle, but a small volume of water is necessary to lift the chorion away from the cell and yolk (Figure 3AB).
  4. Starting with the embryo furthest away, slide the glass plate and zoom in so that the first embryo fills approximately 25% of the field of vision.
  5. Lower the needle into the field of vision, then use the 10 µl pipet tip to gently rotate the embryo to identify the blastomere, a grainy, slightly yellow raised bump of cytoplasm on top of the yolk (Figure 3B), and then rotate so that the blastomere is directly perpendicular to the end of the needle (while keeping the embryo in the indentation of the saw blade, Figure 3C).
    Note: the yolk droplets may move as the embryo is rotated, so do not use them as a frame of reference for the location of the blastomere.
  6. Lower the needle into the cytoplasm but do not push through to the underlying yolk. Apply pressure slowly and evenly when piercing the chorion to avoid breaking the needle. If the needle bends severely, retract and try again in a slightly different location.
  7. Depress the foot pedal 3-4 times to inject so that a red bolus with slightly diffuse edges fills about ~1/8 the diameter of the cytoplasm (see Figure 3D).
    1. Avoid obtaining a red bolus with sharp edges that do not begin to diffuse, which indicates injection into the yolk beneath the cytoplasm (Figure 3E).
    2. If a bright pinkish-red spot diffuses quickly, insert the needle further to puncture the blastomere.
    3. If the injection bolus turns yellow instantly, rotate the embryo to ensure the blastomere has been targeted and inject again (Figure 3F).

Figure 3
Figure 3. Appearance of stickleback embryos before and after injection. All embryos are drawn from the perspective of looking down through the microscope (except for C' and G). (A) Before adding water, fertilized embryos have a uniform appearance with oil droplets floating near the top of the yolk. (B) After adding water, the chorion swells, revealing a blastomere that protrudes from the yolk and is visible in profile. (C) Rotation of the embryo so that the needle enters perpendicularly to the chorion and blastomere. (C') Lateral view of a needle that has punctured the chorion with the tip in the cytoplasm. (D) Injection into the cytoplasm results in a red spot with diffuse edges that fade over time. (E) Injection into the yolk underlying the cytoplasm results in a red spot with defined edges. (F) Injection into the yolk opposite the cytoplasm results in a pH-induced color shift from red to yellow. (G) Lateral view of injection outcomes, with Xs over sub-ideal injection locations. Please click here to view a larger version of this figure.

  1. Use the micromanipulator controls to retract the needle, using the 10 µl pipet tip to hold down the embryo if it sticks to the needle.
  2. After retracting the needle, slide the glass plate to align the next embryo with the needle.
  3. After injecting all embryos, use the transfer pipet to add water to the embryos, then collect them in the transfer pipette and place in 150 mm Petri dish full of stickleback water.
  4. Dry off the glass plate with a paper towel to avoid accumulating too much water.
  5. Distribute fresh embryos onto the saw and repeat steps 4.4 through 4.10.
  6. Keep ~10% of embryos as uninjected controls to ensure that uninjected embryos develop normally and to use as wild-type controls for the molecular assays described below.

5. Post Injection Care

  1. Incubate embryos in Petri dishes at 18 °C after injection until hatching10. Following hatching, rear larvae in aquaria as described10.
  2. Gently pour off the stickleback water one day after injection and replace with fresh stickleback water. Replace with fresh stickleback water at least every other day after that.
  3. Check for dead or malformed embryos daily. Remove such embryos to prevent decay from contaminating the water.

6. Analysis of Injection Results

  1. For injection of fluorescent reporters, monitor embryos daily in a darkened room using a fluorescent dissecting microscope with a GFP or RFP filter (depending on fluorescent transgene). Record anatomical patterns of gene expression with digital photographs and/or written descriptions and tabulation of the number of fish with different expression domains (Figures 4 and 5).
    Note: Sticklebacks have autofluorescent, stellate pigment cells that are visible under GFP filters beginning at 4 days post fertilization (dpf).
    1. To generate stable lines, save embryos with detectable fluorescence and grow to adulthood as described10.
    2. Outcross injected adult fish to wild-type fish using the in vitro fertilization procedure described in section 2.2 and screen offspring for fluorescence as described in step 6.1 to look for fluorescent offspring, indicating successful transgene transmission.
    3. To visualize fluorescence in hatched, free-swimming larvae, add 500 µl 0.8% Tricaine to the 150 mm Petri dish to anaesthetize fish and wait until fish stop moving to image. Immediately rinse several times with fresh stickleback water following observation and imaging.
    4. Optionally, to preserve fluorescence for further imaging, euthanize larvae in 0.025% (250 mg/L) Tricaine buffered with 0.1% sodium bicarbonate and fix for 4 hr in 4% paraformaldehyde in 1x Phosphate Buffered Saline (PBS) at 4 °C. Store in 1x PBS for up to two weeks.
      Note: background auto-fluorescence increases over time.
  2. Diagnostic PCR/digestion Genotyping for Mutation Induction with CRISPRs or TALENs — Best Performed at 2 days Post Fertilization.
    1. Use a transfer pipet to place 10 injected embryos (2 dpf, still in chorions) into the first 10 wells of a 12-well PCR strip tube. Place uninjected control fish in the last two wells.
    2. Remove excess stickleback water.
    3. Add 50 µl lysis buffer (10 mM Tris pH 8.3, 50 mM KCl, 1.5 mM MgCl2, 0.3% Tween-20, and 0.3% NP-40) to each well.
    4. Place caps on tubes and incubate at 95 °C for 20 min in a thermocycler.
      Note: The yolk will turn white and rubbery after the boiling step.
    5. Remove lids and use a different clean 1,000 µl pipet tip to macerate the embryo in each tube.
      Note: White debris will collect at the bottom of the tube.
    6. Add 2.5 µl of 10 mg/ml proteinase K to each well.
    7. Replace lids and incubate at 55 °C for 1 hr to digest protein, followed by 95 °C for 20 min to inactivate proteinase K. Store at -20 °C to avoid mold growth.
    8. Perform PCR using a high-fidelity polymerase following manufacturer's instructions. Use the embryo lysate as DNA template.
      Note: Be careful to remove liquid from top of tube for DNA template, avoiding any visible chorion or yolk debris at the bottom of the tube.
    9. Mix the PCR product in equal volume with a restriction enzyme master mix containing 1x enzyme-specific buffer and 0.25 µl enzyme per sample. Always save half of the uncut PCR product to assay on a gel to confirm PCR products are the predicted size. Incubate the PCR mixed with enzyme at the appropriate conditions for the restriction enzyme.
      Note: Some enzymes may require other ratios of enzyme buffer to PCR product; adjust the buffer concentration if the uninjected controls do not show complete digestion.
    10. Following digestion, run products on a 1% agarose gel next to a DNA size ladder to confirm expected product sizes.
      Note: Uncut bands in injected embryos indicate the presence of molecular lesions (Figure 6) and uninjected controls must be fully digested to interpret results.
    11. To confirm lesions, cut out uncut bands from agarose gels and purify DNA with a gel extraction kit. Use Sanger sequencing, ideally using a sequencing primer internal to the PCR primers, to confirm lesions. In F0 injected embryos, a mix of lesions will likely be present, causing the quality of the Sanger read to degrade near the target site.
    12. To produce a stable line, save all injected embryos from clutches that screen positive for molecular lesions. Grow up fish, outcross, and then screen a subset of F1 embryos for molecular lesions as described in steps 6.2.1 through 6.2.11. If heterozygous carriers are identified, grow the remaining F1 embryos to adulthood and identify heterozygous individuals using DNA extracted from a caudal fin clip.

Representative Results

For reporter gene transgenes that have enhancer activity, successful injection will result in specific, cellular expression of the transgene (Figure 4A, 4C). Injected fish can then be outcrossed to produce stable lines (example of a BAC stable line shown in Figure 4B). Injecting DNA into stickleback embryos typically results in far higher lethality than RNA alone. It is typical to see up to 50% (sometimes even more) lethality or malformation (see Figure 4DF, 4I) after injecting Tol2 reporter constructs (similar to the previously described meganuclease method21). However, the results vary widely based on the specific construct, the embryo morphology, and skill level. For an active enhancer, 40-50% of embryos generally will show tissue-specific transgene expression, for example in the median and pectoral fins (Figure 5). The degree of background and nonspecific fluorescence (Figure 4GI) varies widely based on the promoter used; the zebrafish hsp70l promoter tends to be leaky, especially in muscle and neural tissue, and BACs tend to have high background expression in the yolk (similar to Figure 4G). The carp beta actin41 promoter is less leaky but also drives considerably fainter GFP expression. Transmission of Tol2 plasmid transgenes can be high, with up to 100% of GFP+ F0 fish producing transgenic offspring (Table 2). However, the percent of offspring carrying the transgene varies widely, from <1% to 72% (Table 2). Saving only GFP+ injected embryos generally increases transmission efficiency. BACs tend to have far lower transgenesis rates, with only up to 10% of F0 injected stickleback embryos showing fluorescence in expected tissues. The transmission rate of BACs is lower than that of plasmid constructs, with only up to 14% of screened stickleback transmitting the BAC (Table 2), which is similar to the reported transmission rate of 15% in zebrafish32.

In contrast to the relatively low efficiency of BAC transgenesis, typically 70-100% of screened fish injected with TALENs have mosaic lesions (in n = 10 injected clutches that were screened for lesions). This number could be lower with a less efficient TALEN pair, and may vary with injection quality. Figure 6 shows a PCR/restriction digestion for 10 embryos from a single clutch injected with TALENs targeting a PvuII cut site within Tfap2a. An uncut amplicon in each of the injected embryos (lanes 1-10) indicates that a portion of the cells in each embryo carry lesions at the target locus, though each embryo is highly mosaic with a significant wild-type cut band. The amplicon from uninjected embryos in lanes 11-12 are fully digested with PvuII. TALEN-induced mutations are readily transmitted to the next generation. With two different TALEN sets, 50% and 90% of screened F0s transmitted lesions to offspring, with 20-90% of offspring carrying lesions in positive clutches (Table 3). While CRISPR/Cas9 efficiency has not been optimized in stickleback, with one CRISPR guide targeting Pitx2, one out of three injected embryos had lesions based on Sanger sequencing of a PCR product of the CRISPR target (the uncut band was sequenced following restriction digestion, Figure 7). The loss of sequence quality at the predicted cut site indicates a mix of molecular lesions are present. Fin clipping adult F0 fish and screening for lesions using a PCR and restriction digestion assay found 10/22 fish with somatic lesions in the fin. A representative subset of these animals are shown in Figure 8; individual #3 has a high percentage of DNA with lesions, while individual #2 has a low percentage of DNA with lesions.

Figure 4
Figure 4. Examples of injected embryos. (A) Mosaic embryo injected with an enhancer that drives GFP expression in pectoral (asterisk) and median fins (arrowhead) at 5 days post fertilization (dpf). Scale bar = 500 µm. (B) Stable line of a reporter BAC that drives GFP expression in the embryonic heart at 4 dpf. (C) Mosaic embryo injected with a Col2a1a enhancer that drives mCherry expression in the notochord at 4 dpf. The Col2a1a enhancer was cloned from stickleback DNA with primers 5'-CGCTCCTTGAGGGTTTGAGCTG-3' and 5'-ATACTGTGCTCATTTCGGCCGT-3' which amplify the conserved orthologous enhancer reported in Dale and Topczewski 201145. (D) Example of a normally developing injected embryo. (EF) Examples of malformed embryos with injection trauma; E is lacking the left eye and F has necrotic tissue along the right side (arrowheads). (G) Example of diffuse GFP expression in yolk, likely the result of injection into the yolk rather than the blastomere. (H) Example of non-specific GFP expression in epidermis (arrowhead). (I) Bright, non-specific, granular GFP expression. Please click here to view a larger version of this figure.

Figure 5
Figure 5. Efficiency of reporter construct injection. Ten clutches were injected with a 190 bp stickleback Bmp6 enhancer construct that drives pectoral fin and median fin expression at 5 dpf20. From each clutch, at least 20 embryos were scored for having tissue-specific (pectoral and/or median fin) and/or nonspecific (all other tissues) GFP expression. The percentage of all surviving injected embryos having non-specific and tissue-specific expression is shown as a boxplot. Horizontal lines indicate the first quartile, median and third quartile; whiskers extend to datum within 1.5 IQR (interquartile range) of the first and third quartile. Data are adapted from Erickson et al. 2015. Please click here to view a larger version of this figure.

Figure 6
Figure 6. PCR and restriction digestion to screen for TALEN-induced lesions. A TALEN pair targeting Tfap2a was generated and injected as described. DNA was prepared as described above from 2 dpf injected embryos and a 297 bp fragment surrounding the TALEN target sequence was PCR amplified by a high fidelity DNA polymerase using primers 5'-GGGTCGTTGACGTGCGAGTAA-3' and 5'-AGCGGGACAACGTCATCACTTA-3'. Lanes 1-10 are injected, lanes 11-12 are uninjected, digested controls, and lanes 13-14 are uninjected, undigested controls. PvuII cuts the wild-type sequence into two approximately equal size bands. Uncut bands indicate presence of molecular lesions in the target sequence. All injected embryos in lanes 1-10 show signs of molecular lesions (undigested bands), however all of the embryos either have monoallelic mutations and/or are mosaic as they also have cut (wild-type) bands. Please click here to view a larger version of this figure.

Figure 7
Figure 7. Sanger sequencing from mosaic F0 CRISPR/Cas9 injected embryo. A CRISPR guide RNA (5'-GTGGACCAACCTCACGG-3') against Pitx2 (shown at top) was co-injected with Cas9 mRNA (transcribed from pCS2-nCas9n plasmid as described38) and embryos were screened for lesions using a restriction enzyme assay. The uncut band was gel extracted and sequenced by Sanger sequencing. The sequence quality degrades at the predicted cleavage site (arrow below) due to the mosaic mix of lesions present in the injected embryo. Please click here to view a larger version of this figure.

Figure 8
Figure 8. Analysis of CRISPR F0 caudal fin clips. DNA was prepared from fin clips from F0 juveniles raised from embryos injected with CRISPRs against Pitx2. The CRISPR/Cas9 target was amplified with primers 5'-CTCGGATGACCCTTCAAAAA-3' and 5'-GGCCCAAATTACCCACATTT-3', and the product was digested with EcoRI. Four individuals are shown; an uncut PCR product is on the left and digested PCR product is on the right for each numbered individual. Product the size of the uncut band (~230 bp) in the digested lane indicates the presence of a lesion. Individuals 2, 3 and 4 all show signs of a molecular lesion, indicated with asterisks, with varying mosaicism between individuals. Relevant ladder sizes are indicated on left. Please click here to view a larger version of this figure.

Construct GFP offspring/total F0 screened fish (%) % F1 offspring positive note
BAC A 6/46  (13%) 4-19%
BAC B 1/41 (2%) 4%
BAC C 5/42 (12%) 3-40%
BAC D 3/22 (14%) 5-15%
plasmid A 2/38 (5%) 2-5% all F0 embryos screened, not just GFP+
plasmid B 3/16 (19%) <1-8% all F0 embryos screened, not just GFP+
plasmid C 1/11 (9%) 10%
plasmid D 2/11 (18%) 1-45% plasmid D injected into 2 genetic backgrounds
plasmid D 5/5 (100%) 16-72%
plasmid E 2/3 (67%) 2-22%
plasmid F 2/6 (33%) <1-65%
plasmid G 3/8 (38%) 2-56%
plasmid H 3/18 (17%) not scored
plasmid I 5/24 (21%) not scored

Table 2: Transgene transmission efficiencies for BACs and enhancer constructs. F0 injected embryos were raised to adulthood and then outcrossed to wild-type fish and the F1 offspring scored for GFP fluorescence. The number of F0 individuals that transmitted the transgene is expressed as a percentage of all screened F0 fish. The range of percentages of F1 offspring carrying the transgene is also shown for those clutches that had GFP positive fish.

TALEN % F0 transmitting lesions % F1 offspring positive
A 9/10 (90%) 20-90%
B 4/8 (50%) 20-72%

Table 3: Transmission efficiencies for two TALEN pairs. F0 injected embryos were raised to adulthood and then outcrossed to wild-type fish and the F1 offspring screened for TALEN lesions. The percentage of injected individuals transmitting lesions is shown, as well as the range of percentages of offspring with lesions in those clutches that transmitted lesions. TALEN A targeted a Bmp6 enhancer20, TALEN B targeted Tfap2a (unpublished).

Discussion

Injecting one-cell stickleback embryos for transgenesis or genome editing presents three main challenges. First, relative to zebrafish embryos, the stickleback embryonic chorion is tough and will often break needles. This problem can be partially overcome by using thicker and stronger glass micropipettes and injecting perpendicular to the chorion (see Protocol, Figure 2). Ensuring that as little water as possible is added to the embryos (just enough to cause the chorion to swell and lift away from the cell) helps to reduce chorion hardness. The chorion hardens over time, so working quickly after moistening the embryos is important. Keeping the embryos in a humidity chamber prior to injection so that they do not dry out is also critical. Some clutches and even individual embryos simply have much thicker and tougher chorions; sometimes moving on to the next embryo or trying with a new clutch is the easiest solution. It is much easier to skip one difficult embryo than to replace a damaged needle. Having backup needles ready will allow injections to continue in the case of needle breakage. When injecting BACs, it is common for the needle to clog. The needle can be unclogged by gently scraping or re-breaking the tip with forceps, or by using the constant air pressure switch to purge the clog.

Second, identifying the first cell in the embryo is challenging; it is often quite flattened and difficult for beginners to see, and is especially invisible when looking directly at it. Often the blastomere can only be seen as a slightly raised bump in profile. Therefore, it is best to identify the cell in profile (Figure 3B) and then gently rotate the embryo forward and to the side so the cell will face the end of the angled needle (though the cell will often be invisible from this angle; the darker color of the blastomere in Figure 3 is exaggerated for clarity).

Third, targeting the cytoplasm is also difficult, especially if the first cell is especially flat. Aiming for the fattest part of the blastomere (usually the center) improves the chance of injecting into cytoplasm. While injecting into the yolk near the cytoplasm can successfully produce transgenic fish, the efficiency seems to be increased and lethality decreased when the cytoplasm is targeted with a single needle puncture. Sometimes, individual clutches will have particularly thin blastomeres, such that avoiding the yolk is nearly impossible. Waiting longer than 25 min to begin injections may help (some clutches do not form a full size blastomere until ~45 min post fertilization), but if the blastomeres never increase in size, it is often easier to obtain a new clutch of eggs than to try to inject flattened cells.

Excessive lethality following injections may occur for several reasons. Blunt needles and/or too large a needle bore size may cause too much damage to the cell and/or cause cytoplasm to leak out. Some DNA constructs seem to be especially lethal; lowering the concentration of DNA may improve survival but lower transgenesis rates. Cleaning up plasmids first with a midiprep kit that contains an endotoxin rinse followed by a second PCR cleanup kit reduces construct toxicity. Finally, genome editing may produce a loss of function mutation that is lethal to developing embryos. Reducing the concentration of the CRISPR or TALEN mRNAs can increase the mosaicism of the embryo to prevent lethality, but may reduce mutant allele recovery efficiency.

A previously published protocol for generating transgenic sticklebacks using a meganuclease method21 reported a 4-7% transgene germline transmission rate from F0 founder fish. The Tol2 method reported here resulted in up to a 72% transgene germline transmission rate from F0 founder fish (indicating multiple genomic integrations). The previous study using a meganuclease method reported 40% of injected embryos showing specific GFP expression, similar to that reported here. Thus while similar rates of transgenic F0 founders are observed for transgenic fish generated by both the meganuclease and Tol2 methods, the germline transmission rate appears much higher for Tol2 mediated transgenics.

As genome editing technologies continue to advance, even more specific genetic manipulations will become possible in stickleback and other fish species. For example, directed repair46 and homologous recombination will allow allele swaps between marine and freshwater stickleback genomes, and modified CRISPRs can be used to specifically activate or inhibit gene expression47. These exciting technologies for genome editing and analysis will lead to new insights about the genetic basis of many interesting morphological, physiological, and behavioral phenotypes in sticklebacks and other fish species.

Divulgations

The authors have nothing to disclose.

Acknowledgements

This work was funded in part by NIH R01 #DE021475 (CTM), an NIH Predoctoral Training Grant 5T32GM007127 (PAE), and an NSF Graduate Research Fellowship (NAE). We thank Kevin Schwalbach for performing BAC recombineering and injections, Nick Donde for generating CRISPR Sanger sequencing data, and Katherine Lipari for helpful feedback on the injection protocol.

Materials

Stereomicroscope with transillumination Leica S6e/ KL300 LED
Manual micromanipulator Applied Scientific Instrumentation MM33 Marzhauser M33 Micromanipulator
Pressure Injecion system Applied Scientific Instrumentation MPPI-3
Back pressure unit Applied Scientific Instrumentation BPU
Micropipette holder kit Applied Scientific Instrumentation MPIP
Magnetic base holder Applied Scientific Instrumentation Magnetic base
Foot switch Applied Scientific Instrumentation FSW
Iron plate (magnetic base) Narishige IP
Flaming/Brown Micropipette Puller Sutter Instrument P-97
Disposable transfer pipettes Fisher 13-711-7M
0.5% phenol red in DPBS Sigma  P0290 injection tracer
#5 forceps, biologie dumoxel  Fine Science Tools 11252-30 for needle breaking
Micropipette Storage Jar World Precision Instruments E210 holds needles
6", 6 teeth per inch plaster drywall saw Lenox 20571 (S636RP) hold eggs for injection
13 cm x 13 cm glass plate any hardware store
Borosilicate glass capillaries, 1.0 mm OD/0.58 mm ID  World Precision Instruments 1B100-F4 *harder glass than zebrafish injection capillaries
150 x 15mm petri dish Fisher FB0875714 raise stickleback embryos
35 x 10mm petri dish Fisher 08-757-100A store eggs pre-injection
Instant Ocean Salt Instant Ocean SS15-10
Sodium Bicarbonate Sigma S5761-500G
Tricaine methanesulfonate/MS-222 Western Chemical Inc MS222 fish anaesthesia/euthanasia
Sp6 transcription kit Ambion AM1340 For transcription of TALENs and transposase mRNA
RNeasy cleanup kit Qiagen 74104 purify transposase or TALEN RNA
QiaQuick PCR cleanup kit Qiagen 28104 clean up plasmids for injection
Proteinase K 20 mg/ml Ambion AM2546 for DNA preparation
Nucleobond BAC 100 kit Clontech 740579 for BAC DNA preparation
NotI NEB R0189L
Phusion polymerase Fisher F-530L
Qiagen PlasmidPlus Midi kit Qiagen 12943 contains endotoxin rinse buffer
QIAQuick Gel Extraction Qiagen 28704  for sequencing induced mutations
Phenol:chloroform:Isoamyl alcohol Sigma P2069-100ML
Sodium acetate Sigma S2889-250G
Ethanol (molecular biology grade) Sigma E7023-500ML
Agarose Sigma A9539
50X Tris-acetate-EDTA buffer ThermoFisher B49
0.5-10KbRNA ladder ThermoFisher 15623-200
Nanodrop  Spectrophotometer Thermo Scientific Nanodrop 2000
Paraformaldehyde Sigma 158127-500G
10X PBS ThermoFisher 70011-044
1kb Plus DNA Ladder ThermoFisher 10787-018
Potassium Chloride Sigma P9541-500G
Magnesium Chloride Sigma M8266-100G
NP-40 ThermoFisher 28324
Tween 20 Sigma P1379-500ML
Tris pH 8.3 Teknova T1083
12-strip PCR tube Thermo Scientific AB-1113

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Erickson, P. A., Ellis, N. A., Miller, C. T. Microinjection for Transgenesis and Genome Editing in Threespine Sticklebacks. J. Vis. Exp. (111), e54055, doi:10.3791/54055 (2016).

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