We present detailed protocols for performing small-angle X-ray diffraction experiments using intact mouse skeletal muscles. With the wide availability of transgenic mouse models for human diseases, this experimental platform can form a useful test bed for elucidating the structural basis of genetic muscle diseases
Transgenic mouse models have been important tools for studying the relationship of genotype to phenotype for human diseases including those of skeletal muscle. Mouse skeletal muscle has been shown to produce high quality X-ray diffraction patterns on third generation synchrotron beamlines providing an opportunity to link changes at the level of the genotype to functional phenotypes in health and disease by determining the structural consequences of genetic changes. We present detailed protocols for preparation of specimens, collecting the X-ray patterns and extracting relevant structural parameters from the X-ray patterns that may help guide experimenters wishing to perform such experiments for themselves.
Synchrotron small-angle X-ray diffraction is the method of choice for studying the nm-scale structure of actively contracting muscle preparations under physiological conditions. Importantly, structural information from living or skinned muscle preparations can be obtained in synchrony with physiological data, such as muscle force and length changes. There has been increasing interest in applying this technique to study the structural basis of inherited muscle diseases that have their basis in point mutations in sarcomeric proteins. The muscle biophysics community has been very active in generating transgenic mouse models for these human disease conditions that could provide ideal test beds for structural studies. Recent publications from our group1,2,3 and others4,5 have indicated that the X-ray patterns from the mouse extensor digitorum longus (EDL) and soleus muscles can provide all the diffraction information available from more traditional model organisms such as frog and rabbit psoas skeletal muscle. An advantage of the mouse skeletal muscle preparation is the ease of dissection and performing basic membrane-intact, whole muscle physiological experiments. The dimensions of the dissected muscle have sufficient mass to yield highly detailed muscle patterns in very short X-ray exposure times (~millisecond per frame) on third generation X-ray beamlines.
Muscle X-ray diffraction patterns consist of the equatorial reflections, the meridional reflections as well as the layer line reflections. The equatorial intensity ratio (ratio of the intensity of the 1,1 and 1,0 equatorial reflections, I11/I10), is closely correlated to the number of attached cross-bridges, which is proportional to the force generated in mouse skeletal muscle2. The meridional reflections that report periodicities within the thick and thin filaments can be used to estimate filament extensibility1,3,6,7. Diffraction features not on the meridian and the equator are called layer lines, which arise from the approximately helically ordered myosin heads on the surface of thick filament backbone as well as the approximately helically ordered thin filaments. The intensity of myosin layer lines is closely related to the degree of ordering of myosin heads under various conditions2,8. All of this information can be used study the behaviors of sarcomeric proteins in situ in health and disease.
Synchrotron X-ray diffraction of muscle has been historically done by teams of highly specialized experts but advances in technology and the availability of new data reduction tools indicate that this need not always be the case. The BioCAT Beamline 18ID at the Advanced Photon Source, Argonne National Laboratory has dedicated staff and support facilities for performing muscle X-ray diffraction experiments that can help newcomers to the field get started in using these techniques. Many users choose to formally collaborate with BioCAT staff, but an increasing number of users find they can do the experiments and analysis themselves reducing the burden on beamline staff. The primary goal of this paper is to provide training that provides potential experimenters with the information they need to plan and execute experiments on the mouse skeletal muscle system either at the BioCAT beamline or at other high flux beamlines around the world where these experiments would be possible.
All animal experiments protocols were approved by the Illinois Institute of Technology Institutional Animal Care and Use Committee (Protocol 2015-001, Approval date: 3 November 2015) and followed the NIH "Guide for the Care and Use of Laboratory Animals"9.
1. Pre-experiment Preparation
2. Muscle Preparation
3. X-ray Diffraction
NOTE: The following description is for X-ray diffraction experiments done using the small angle X-ray diffraction instrument on the BioCAT beamline 18ID at the Advanced Photon Source, Argonne National Laboratory but similar methods could be employed on other beamlines such as ID 02 at the ESRF (France) and BL40XU at SPring8 (Japan). Beamline 18ID is operated at a fixed X-ray beam energy of 12 keV (0.1033 nm wavelength) with an incident flux of ~1013 photons per second in the full beam.
4. Post-experiment Muscle Treatment
Isometric tetanic contraction. Any kind of classic muscle mechanical experiment, such as isometric or isotonic contractions, can be performed with simultaneous acquisition of X-ray patterns. Figure 1A shows the experimental setup for mechanical and X-ray experiments. An example force trace for an isometric tetanic contraction is shown in Figure 1B. The muscle was held at resting for 0.5 s before activated for 1 s. The mechanical recording stops 1 s after the stimulus. The X-ray patterns were collected continuously throughout the protocol at 1 ms exposure time at 500 Hz.
X-ray diffraction patterns. The muscle X-ray diffraction pattern can give nanometer resolution structural information from structures inside the sarcomere. Muscle X-ray diffraction patterns are composed of four equivalent quadrants divided by the equator and the meridian. The equatorial pattern arises from the myofilament packing within the sarcomere perpendicular to the fiber axis, while the meridional patterns report structural information from the myofilaments along the muscle axis. The remaining reflections not on the equator or the meridian are called layer lines. Layer lines (e.g., features labeled MLL4 and ALL6 in Figure 2A) arise from the approximately-helical arrangement of molecular subunits within the myosin containing thick filaments and the actin containing thin filaments. The myosin-based layer lines are strong and sharp in patterns from resting muscle (Figure 2A), while actin-based layer lines are more prominent in patterns from contracting muscle (Figure 2B). Difference patterns obtained by subtracting the resting pattern from the contracting pattern (Figure 2C) can shed light on structural changes during force development in healthy and diseased muscle. By following these structural changes at the millisecond time scale of the molecular events during muscle contraction, the X-ray diffraction patterns can reveal substantial structural information (Figure 2D).
Data Analysis using MuscleX. Here is an example of equatorial reflections analysis using the “equator” routine in the MuscleX package (Figure 3). MuscleX is an open-source analysis software package developed at BioCAT13. The equatorial intensity ratio (I1,1/I1,0) is an indicator of the proximity of myosin to actin in resting muscle (Figure 3A), while it is closely correlated to the number of attached cross-bridges in contracting (Figure 3B) murine skeletal muscle2. The intensity ratio, I1,1/I1,0, is about 0.47 in resting muscle and about 1.2 in contracting muscle. The distance between the two 1,0 reflection (2*S1,0) is inversely related to the inter-filament spacing. Detailed documentations and manuals for MuscleX are available online13.
Figure 1: Mechanical and X-ray experiment setup and protocol. (A) The muscle is mounted on one end to a hook inside the experimental chamber and the other end to a dual mode motor/force transducer. It is held between two Kapton film windows to allow the X-rays to pass through. The chamber is filled with Ringer’s solution perfused with 100% oxygen throughout the experiment. (B) The mechanical protocol for X-ray experiments on a muscle during tetanic contraction. Please click here to view a larger version of this figure.
Figure 2: EDL X-ray diffraction patterns. EDL muscle X-ray diffraction pattern from resting (A) and contracting (B) muscle. (C) The difference pattern between resting and contracting pattern. The blue region indicates high intensity in resting pattern, while the yellow region represents high intensity in contracting pattern. (D) X-ray diffraction pattern from a 1 ms exposure with EDL muscle. MLL1 = First order myosin layer line; MLL4 = Fourth order myosin layer line; ALL1 = First order actin layer line ALL6 = Sixth order actin layer line; ALL7 = Seventh order actin layer line; Tm = tropomyosin reflection (indicated by a white box); M3 = third order meridional reflection; M6 = sixth order meridional reflection. Please click here to view a larger version of this figure.
Figure 3: Data analysis of equatorial patterns using MuscleX. The background subtracted equatorial intensity ratio profile (while area) and first five orders (green lines) were fit to calculate the intensity of each peak. Please click here to view a larger version of this figure.
Recent publications from our group showed that X-ray patterns from the mouse skeletal muscle can be used to shed light on sarcomeric structural information from muscle in health and disease1,2,3 especially with the increased availability of genetic modified mouse models for various myopathies. High resolution mechanical studies on single fibers or small bundles combined with X-ray diffraction is best done by experts. If, however, more modest mechanical information will suffice for your purposes, the whole muscle preparation allows collection of detailed X-ray patterns from a simple preparation.
A clean dissection is key to a successful combined mechanical and X-ray experiment. It is very important not to pull on the target muscle as well as other muscles associated with the soleus or EDL muscles during dissection since this could tear parts of the muscle and lead to reduced force. It can also lead to damaged internal structure that will degrade the X-ray patterns. Since everything will scatter in the X-ray beam, it is important to cleaning away any extra fat, the collagen in fascia as well as any hairs or loose bits of tissue while doing the following protocol. To reduce additional compliance in the muscle preparation, it is also important to securely tie the tendons to the hooks, as close as possible to the muscle body without damaging it.
Different X-ray exposure times can provide different kinds of information from the same muscle. Using the full beam on 18ID, an analyzable equatorial pattern can be obtained in a 1 ms exposure (See Figure 2D). For an analyzable first myosin layer line reflection, a 10 ms total exposure time is typically required. To collect higher order meridional reflections such as the M15 (2.8 nm myosin meridional reflection) and the 2.7 nm actin meridional reflection, typically at least 1 s total exposure is required but more than 2 s total exposure is recommended for high accuracy measurements.
The choice of the optimal X-ray detector for the experiment is important. For the most detailed X-ray patterns a customized CCD detector, such as the one at BioCAT with ca. 40 µm pixels and ~65 µm point spread functions in the phosphor, can provide patterns with high dynamic range and good spatial resolution but can only take one frame at a time. For time resolved experiments, the photon counting pixel array detector at BioCAT can collect X-ray patterns at 500 Hz. The 172 µm pixel size with this detector, however, does not provide sufficient spatial resolution for detailed studies of the inner part of the meridian but is adequate for most other purposes. BioCAT acquired a high-resolution photon counting detector providing 75 µm real resolution at maximum frame rate of 9,000 Hz. Similar detectors of this type are expected to supplant current detectors for muscle studies over the next few years.
With the very high fluxes of X-rays at third generation synchrotrons, radiation damage is a serious concern. It is always a good choice to attenuate the beam to deliver no more beam than is needed to observe the desired diffraction features. The same total X-ray exposure can be achieved by prolonging the exposure time from an attenuated beam. An advantage of photon counting pixel array detectors is that individual frames can be summed together with no noise penalty. Even then, radiation damage is possible. Signs of radiation damage includes drop of maximum force of contraction, smearing of layer line reflections, even change of muscle color.
One of the limitations of the intact mouse skeletal muscle preparation is the difficulty in obtaining sarcomere length from the intact muscle during the experiments. The muscles are too thick for video microscopy and laser diffraction. While with future developments it may be possible to estimate sarcomere length directly from the diffraction patterns14, in the near term the only option is to measure it after the experiment as described here.
The authors have nothing to disclose.
This research used resources of the Advanced Photon Source, a U.S. Department of Energy (DOE) Office of Science User Facility operated for the DOE Office of Science by Argonne National Laboratory under Contract No. DE-AC02-06CH11357. This project was supported by grant P41 GM103622 from the National Institute of General Medical Sciences of the National Institutes of Health. Use of the Pilatus 3 1M detector was provided by grant 1S10OD018090-01 from NIGMS. The content is solely the responsibility of the authors and does not necessarily reflect the official views of the National Institute of General Medical Sciences or the National Institutes of Health.
#5 forceps | WPI | 500342 | |
4/0 surgical suture | Braintree Sci | SUT-S 108 | |
aquarium air stone | uxcell | a regular air stone from a pet store would be fine | |
CaCl2 | Sigma-Aldrich | C5670 | |
CCD detector | Rayonix Inc | MAR 165 CCD | |
data accquisition system | Aurora Scientific Inc | 610A | |
elastomer compound | Dow Corning | Sylgard 184 | |
Glucose | Sigma-Aldrich | G8270 | |
HEPES | Sigma-Aldrich | H3375 | |
High resolution photon counting detector | Dectris Inc | EIGER X 500K | |
high-power bi-phasic current stimulator | Aurora Scientific Inc | 701 | |
Iris Scissors | WPI | 501263-G | |
KCl | Sigma-Aldrich | P9541 | |
MgSO4 | Sigma-Aldrich | M7506 | |
micro scissor | WPI | 503365 | |
motor/force transducer | Aurora Scientific Inc | 300C-LR | |
NaCl | Sigma-Aldrich | S9888 | |
petri-dish | Sigma-Aldrich | CLS430167 | |
photon counting detector | Dectris Inc | Pilatus 3 1M | |
Stainless Steel wire | McMaster-carr | 8908K21 | |
Suture Tying Forceps | WPI | 504498 | |
Video sarcomere length measuring system | Aurora Scientific Inc | 900B |