We present a protocol for isolating single somites from zebrafish embryos, the dynamics of which can be followed in culture for several hours by fluorescence time-lapse microscopy, thus providing a methodology to quantify tissue-scale shape changes at single-cell resolution.
The body axis of vertebrate embryos is periodically subdivided into 3D multicellular units called somites. While genetic oscillations and molecular prepatterns determine the initial length-scale of somites, mechanical processes have been implicated in setting their final size and shape. To better understand the intrinsic material properties of somites, a method is developed to culture single-somite explant from zebrafish embryos. Single somites are isolated by first removing the skin of embryos, followed by yolk removal and sequential excision of neighboring tissues. Using transgenic embryos, the distribution of various sub-cellular structures can be observed by fluorescent time-lapse microscopy. Dynamics of explanted somites can be followed for several hours, thus providing an experimental framework for studying tissue-scale shape changes at single-cell resolution. This approach enables direct mechanical manipulation of somites, allowing for dissection of the material properties of the tissue. Finally, the technique outlined here can be readily extended for explanting other tissues such as the notochord, neural plate, and lateral plate mesoderm.
Much of the vertebrate adult musculoskeletal system emerges from embryonic somites, which form in a periodic and rhythmic manner along the body axis of embryos1,2. Somites are three dimensional (3D) multicellular units typically consisting of an inner core of mesenchymal cells and a peripheral epithelial layer surrounded by a fibronectin-rich extracellular matrix3. The morphology of somites i.e., their size and shape, is in part determined by the segmentation clock and downstream molecular prepatterns. However, over the last decade, it has emerged that mechanical cues and forces also play a role in regulating the segmentation clock4, in addition to facilitating somite formation5,6,7, and ensuring increased precision of somite lengths following initial somite formation8.
Tissue mechanics can be studied directly in vivo with the availability of new tools9, however, to obtain a complete picture underlying the physical processes, the intrinsic material properties of tissues need to be simultaneously studied. The protocol described here provides a simple approach to prepare single somites, whose physical properties from cellular to tissue scales can be studied in isolation from the embryo. While several protocols exist for preparing explants at similar developmental stages10,11,12,13,14, to our knowledge, this is the first protocol that describes isolation of single somites. The protocol is straightforward to implement and requires only basic equipment available in most zebrafish labs working with embryos.
To aid in teasing apart the role of mechanics in morphological somite formation, a method is developed to culture single-somite explant from zebrafish embryos, which can be used to probe intrinsic material properties of somites.
The somitogenesis field has been dominated by studies of the segmentation clock's role in setting segment lengths during embryo development. However, its equally important to consider the role of tissue mechanics in determining final somite morphologies. The protocol described here allows for explanting single somites, whose intrinsic physical properties can be studied in isolation from the embryo. However, the manual preparation limits the numbers of somites that are typically prepared to four to six per imaging session. Since the protocol involves careful fine dissections of several tissues in embryos without the use of any enzymes to facilitate tissue removal, it may take a few weeks of practice to master the dissection process. In our hands the critical steps in the protocol involve careful removal of skin and yolk from the explants, which prevents explants at different stages of the protocol from sticking to the tools used, which in turn enables easier dissections to serially remove tissues surrounding a somite.
The dissection protocol can be stopped at intermediate steps to obtain somites attached to just one of the surrounding tissues or to obtain explants of groups of somites. This provides a powerful method to serially strip down tissues and study the impact of neighboring tissues in facilitating shape changes in somites, or in the neighboring tissues. On the other hand, using this protocol, individual explanted tissues can be allowed to adhere and mechanically self-organize, as demonstrated by placing two explanted somites in close proximity.
Explants prepared by this method do not require any added ingredients in the buffer or constraints to ensure survival for periods of time up to several hours. However, one can envision culturing them in hydrogels and following their dynamics in the presence of external constraints, which could serve as a model for the contact stresses somites encounter in vivo. Furthermore, explants allow for directly probing their material properties through atomic force microscopy, pipette aspiration, or by using micro-robotic tools16. Finally, we expect that this method can be easily adapted towards culturing and studying other developmental tissues at similar stages such as the notochord, neural plate and lateral plate mesoderm.
The authors have nothing to disclose.
We thank members of the Oates lab for comments on the protocol and the fish facility of the École polytechnique fédérale de Lausanne (EPFL). In particular, we acknowledge Laurel Ann Rohde for valuable tips on skin and yolk removal in the dissection protocol; Arianne Bercowsky Rama for building an efficient pipeline for processing light-sheet data sets through Mastodon; Jean-Yves Tinevez for building the open-source Mastodon software; Marko Popović for tips on data analysis; Chloé Jollivet, Guillaume Valentin and Florian Lang for extensive support in the fish facility; Petr Strnad and Andrea Boni for building the light-sheet microscope and for tips on light-sheet imaging. This work was supported by EPFL and S.R.N. was supported by a Long-Term Human Frontier Science Program postdoctoral fellowship (LT000078/2016).
Agarose | Sigma | 9012-36-6 | For coating bottom of petri dishes |
Agarose, low gelling temperature | Sigma | 39346-81-1 | For preparing Viventis imaging chamber |
Camera | Andor | Andor Zyla 4.2 Plus | For image acquisition in the light-sheet microscope |
Detection objective | Nikon | Nikon CFI75 Apo LWD 25x/1.1 NA | For imaging explants |
FEP membrane strip | Lohmann Technologies UK Ltd | Dupont FEP Fluorocarbon film, 200A | For preparing Viventis imaging chamber |
Fine forceps | Dumont | Dumont 5SF 11252-00 | For removal of skin of embryos |
Forceps | Dumont | Dumont 55 | For dechorionating embryos |
Leibovitz's L-15 medium | Gibco | 21083-027 | Explant culture medium |
Light-sheet microscope | Viventis | LS1 live | For imaging explants |
Micro knife | Fine Science Tools | 10318-14 | For making incisions in embryos |
Silicone rubber formulation | Wacker Chemie AG | Silpuran 4200 | For preparing Viventis imaging chamber |
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