Here, we provide a low-cost and reliable method to generate electroporated brain organotypic slice cultures from mouse embryos suitable for confocal microscopy and live-imaging techniques.
GABAergic interneurons (INs) are critical components of neuronal networks that drive cognition and behavior. INs destined to populate the cortex migrate tangentially from their place of origin in the ventral telencephalon (including from the medial and caudal ganglionic eminences (MGE, CGE)) to the dorsal cortical plate in response to a variety of intrinsic and extrinsic cues. Different methodologies have been developed over the years to genetically manipulate specific pathways and investigate how they regulate the dynamic cytoskeletal changes required for proper IN migration. In utero electroporation has been extensively used to study the effect of gene repression or overexpression in specific IN subtypes while assessing the impact on morphology and final position. However, while this approach is readily used to modify radially migrating pyramidal cells, it is more technically challenging when targeting INs. In utero electroporation generates a low yield given the decreased survival rates of pups when electroporation is conducted before e14.5, as is customary when studying MGE-derived INs. In an alternative approach, MGE explants provide easy access to the MGE and facilitate the imaging of genetically modified INs. However, in these explants, INs migrate into an artificial matrix, devoid of endogenous guidance cues and thalamic inputs. This prompted us to optimize a method where INs can migrate in a more naturalistic environment, while circumventing the technical challenges of in utero approaches. In this paper, we describe the combination of ex utero electroporation of embryonic mouse brains followed by organotypic slice cultures to readily track, image and reconstruct genetically modified INs migrating along their natural paths in response to endogenous cues. This approach allows for both the quantification of the dynamic aspects of IN migration with time-lapse confocal imaging, as well as the detailed analysis of various morphological parameters using neuronal reconstructions on fixed immunolabeled tissue.
Cortical GABAergic interneurons (INs) are diverse with regards to their biochemical properties, physiological properties and connectivity, and they mediate different functions in mature networks1,2,3,4,5. The specification of different subtypes of cortical INs is tightly regulated through genetic cascades that have been extensively studied1,2. The majority (70%) of cortical GABAergic INs originate from progenitors in the medial ganglionic eminence (MGE), a ventrally located embryonic structure, and must migrate across relatively long distances to reach the cortical plate1,2,6. While cortical pyramidal cells migrate radially from the ventricular zone (VZ) to the cortical plate along the radial glia scaffold, the tangential migration of INs, which are not attached to such a scaffold, requires a variety of intrinsic and extrinsic cues to attract migrating neurons towards the cortical plate, while guiding them away from non-cortical structures2,7,8. After exiting the cell cycle, INs are repelled from the MGE by chemo-repulsive cues expressed within the VZ of the MGE, which triggers tangential migration towards the cortical plate9,10. Migrating INs avoid the striatum with the aid of different repulsive cues11 and, after reaching the cortical plate, they switch from a tangential to a radial migration mode and reach their final laminar position, partly in response to cues from pyramidal cells12 and other cellular populations13. The migration of INs, as for other neuronal populations, involves various dynamic morphological changes to permit the actual movement of the neuron. This so-called neuronal locomotion is characterized by repetitive cycles of three successive steps: the elongation of a leading process, an active anterograde motion of the nucleus (nucleokinesis), and the retraction of the trailing process14. IN migration is regulated by numerous intrinsic and extrinsic cues that drive the branching and active remodeling of the leading process to guide INs in the proper direction, determining both orientation and speed of migration14,15,16.
The determinants regulating cortical IN migration have been extensively studied in recent years1,2,7,17,18,19,20, and disruption in some of these molecular actors has been postulated to lead to neurodevelopmental disorders, such as pediatric refractory epilepsy or autism spectrum disorders1,2,21,22,23,24. Therefore, the development of various in vitro and in vivo approaches has been pursued to significantly advance our ability to study this dynamic process, as previously reviewed25. In vitro methods, including the Boyden chamber assay and the Stripe Choice Assay, provide the fastest and most reproducible means of assessing the requirement and cell-autonomous impact of specific genes or proteins during neuronal migration, without the influence of other factors25. These assays are particularly useful when combined with live-imaging8,26,27. With these techniques, INs are easily retrieved from e13.5 MGE and isolated by enzymatic and mechanical dissociation, after which different signaling pathways and guidance cues can be investigated, as illustrated previously8,28. However, these assays take place in an artificial extracellular matrix in the absence of three-dimensional tissue architecture, which may alter neuronal behavior and cell properties, potentially affecting cell migration and/or survival25. To circumvent these limitations, ex vivo MGE explants have been developed as an alternative tool to quantify the dynamic morphological changes occurring during migration along with parameters such as speed and orientation14,29. Generating MGE explants is relatively straightforward and has been extensively described elsewhere30. It entails the plating of a small extract of the MGE on a monolayer of mixed cortical cells or in a mixture of matrigel and collagen in the presence of attractive or repulsive cues25, although the latter are optional31. MGE explants allow for high resolution imaging of sparsely labeled cells, simplifying the study of intracellular processes, such as cytoskeletal remodeling during leading process branching, as shown previously32,33,34 and in the present study. MGE explants have been used successfully to assess dynamic cytoskeletal changes during IN migration in a 2D environment, for instance after specific pharmacological or chemotactic manipulations (see, for example, Tielens et al. 201633). However, with this approach, INs migrate within an artificial matrix, and this might alter IN behavior and the reproducibility and significance of the experimental results.
By contrast, in utero electroporation enables the genetic manipulation of INs in their native environment and is a widely used method to rapidly and efficiently assess the impact of gain and loss of gene function while circumventing the limitations of costly and time-consuming knockout and knock-in strategies25,35. In utero electroporation can be biased towards IN progenitors by using cell type specific promoters and by positioning the electrodes towards ventromedial structures, including the MGE36. Furthermore, in utero electroporation allows for the timely expression of experimental constructs within 1 – 2 days, as compared to the 7 – 10 days required for construct expression using viral vectors25. However, in utero electroporation of IN progenitors tends to be low-yield. Indeed, although pyramidal cell progenitors located in the dorsal ventricular zone can be efficiently transfected using in utero electroporation, targeting more ventrally located structures, such as the MGE, is more technically challenging, especially in small e13.5 embryos, and the high rate of embryonic lethality further reduces the experimental yield25.
To circumvent some of the technical limitations associated with in vitro MGE explant experiments and in vivo in utero electroporation, ex vivo organotypic slice cultures have been developed8,37,38,39. Brain organotypic slice cultures offer the advantage of mimicking in vivo conditions, while being less expensive and time-consuming than generating animal models25. Indeed, these preparations allow an easy access to the MGE, along with the specific visualization of INs, and can be combined with focal electroporation to investigate specific molecular pathways in INs migrating in a more physiological environment8,39,40,41. We have therefore optimized an approach for organotypic cultures38, which we combined with ex utero electroporation and time-lapse confocal imaging, to further assess the morphological and dynamic process occurring during tangential migration of MGE-INs. The present protocol was adapted and optimized from others who have used ex utero or in utero brain electroporation and organotypic slice cultures to study the migration of pyramidal cells42,43 and cortical INs36,39,44. Specifically, mouse embryos are decapitated and the MGE is electroporated ex vivo after the intraventricular injection of the experimental plasmids, allowing more efficient and precise targeting of MGE progenitors than what can be achieved with in utero electroporation. The brains are then extracted and sectioned into whole brain coronal slices that can be cultured for a few days, thus allowing continuous tracking and imaging of transfected INs. This approach typically labels 5 – 20 tangentially migrating INs per brain slice, minimizing the number of experimental iterations required to reach statistical significance, while labeling a sufficiently sparse neuronal population to ensure easy separation of individual neurons for reconstruction and fine morphological assessment. Furthermore, compared to MGE explants, organotypic cultures ensure that migrating INs are exposed to a more natural environment, including locally secreted chemokines and inputs from thalamic afferents. This approach is thus well suited to quantify the directionality and migratory path adopted by transfected INs, while offering sufficient anatomical details to allow the characterization of finer dynamic processes such as leading process branching, nucleokinesis and trailing process retraction.
All experiments involving animals were approved by the Comité Institutionnel des Bonnes Pratiques avec les Animaux de Recherche (CIBPAR) at the CHU Sainte-Justine Research Center and were conducted in accordance with the Canadian Council on Animal Care's guide to the Care and Use of Experimental Animals (Ed. 2).
The protocol described here was optimized for electroporation of embryos at embryonic day (e) 13.5, at a time when MGE-derived INs are actively generated, before the peak of CGE-derived INs production45,46. Furthermore, to bias the electroporation towards GABAergic INs, we use a promoter selectively expressed in INs (for instance the Dlx5/6 promoter with its minimal enhancer)47.
1. Preparation of Solutions for Electroporation and Organotypic Slice Cultures
2. Preparation of Plasmids for Injection
3. Collection of Mouse Embryos from Pregnant Females
4. Intraventricular Plasmid Injections and Ex Vivo Electroporation of the MGE
NOTE: The following steps must be performed under sterile conditions in the previously prepared biosafety cabinet.
5. Brain Dissection and Organotypic Slice Cultures
In this section, we provide representative results obtained following the ex utero electroporation of a control plasmid, or an experimental plasmid targeting a gene of interest, in the MGE of e13.5 mouse embryos followed by organotypic slice cultures incubated at 37 °C for 48 h (for time-lapse imaging) or 72 h (for fixation and immunohistochemical labeling) (see Figure 1B for schematic protocol). Representative examples of INs migrating from an MGE explant are also illustrated (see Figure 1C for schematic protocol) as a comparison to the method described here. The electroporation of a plasmid in MGE progenitors seems to delay the exit of INs from the MGE and culture time must be adjusted accordingly.
In a successful experiment, organotypic slices appear healthy under the confocal microscope, i.e. cortical layers are easily distinguishable using the bright field mode and there is no visible contamination on the slice surface (recognizable by intense autofluorescence and the presence of fluorescent filaments visible under epifluorescence). In healthy chronic organotypic slices, approximately 20% of cells undergo apoptosis after 72 h in culture (Figure 2), as previously described in chronic organotypic cultures (e.g. postnatal cultures)52. Nonetheless, gross cytoarchitectural brain structure remains well defined, as illustrated here using DAPI staining (Figure 2A). Our protocol for ex vivo electroporation of the MGE yields an average of 50 – 100 transfected cells per slice (Figure 3A,B), of which 5 – 20 cells will be seen migrating dorsally after 72 h in culture. After fixation and immunohistochemical staining, INs migrating tangentially towards the cortical plate can be easily identified with confocal microscopy as they present an elongated/oval cell body, the occasional trailing process, and a leading process oriented tangentially. The leading process usually gives rise to one or two branches and is recognizable by the presence of an occasional swelling in front of the nucleus (housing the centrosome before nucleokinesis) and growth cones at the end of each branch. (Figure 3C-G).
This protocol was designed for the observation of migrating MGE-derived INs at the single-cell level using time-lapse imaging. For this particular experiment (Figure 4), coronal organotypic brain slices were generated from Dlx5/6Cre;RCEEGFP embryos electroporated at e13.5 with a plasmid expressing an experimental shRNA (targeting a gene of interest) and the TdTomato cassette. The slices were incubated for 48 h, transferred to an 8-well chambered coverslip dish (1 slice per chamber floating on a thin layer of supplemented culture medium) and imaged every 3 minutes for 6 – 8 h using a 20x air (0.70 NA) objective on an inverted microscope equipped with a spinning disk confocal head, a computer-assisted acquisition software and a stage-top environmental chamber. During imaging, the slices were kept at 37 °C and were continuously oxygenated and humidified in the environmental chamber (5% CO2 and 60% H2O). Electroporated MGE-derived INs were identified as such by their expression of eGFP, confirming their GABAergic IN identity, and their expression of TdTomato, confirming that they express the experimental plasmid (Figure 4A,B). Electroporated INs are easily identifiable and well isolated, as seen in Figure 4, allowing for the finer analysis of migration dynamic parameters, such as speed and distance traveled. In addition, labeled INs are seen migrating tangentially towards the cortical plate, while in their natural environment, enabling us to identify dynamic morphological changes such as branching of the leading process and nucleokinesis (Figure 4C-F).
The ex vivo electroporation of MGE-derived INs can also be combined with MGE explants to enable high resolution imaging of dynamic cytoskeletal processes occurring during migration, as a complement to the study of directionality and migratory dynamics in organotypic cultures. As an example, different phases of neuronal locomotion reminiscent of those occurring during tangential migration of INs in organotypic slice cultures can be observed in electroporated INs migrating from an MGE explant 48 h after electroporation, such as leading neurite extension and nucleokinesis (Figure 5B-E). Various cytoskeletal processes can then be studied at high resolution in isolated cells migrating from an MGE explant, for instance by staining F-actin structures with phalloidin (Figure 6A), which cannot be achieved optimally in organotypic slices given the high cellular density (and thus of cytoskeletal elements) in a native environment. These cytoskeletal processes, and in particular F-actin remodeling, can further be studied dynamically by combining Lifeact expression with time-lapse imaging. For instance, we show an example of high-resolution time-lapse imaging of an IN derived from an MGE explant obtained from a Nkx2.1Cre;RCEEGFP mouse brain carrying a targeted deletion of a gene of interest in INs. This IN was transfected with the mCherry-Lifeact-7 plasmid under the control of the CMV promoter (gift from Michael Davidson), using the method schematized in Figure 1C, allowing for the tracking of F-actin remodeling occurring in real-time (Figure 6B). Thus, while organotypic cultures are required to properly assess directionality or migration path of genetically modified INs, MGE explants can complement such studies by providing better access to isolated cells for high-resolution imaging of dynamic cytoskeletal processes.
Technical pitfalls may result in failure of the experiments described above. For instance, embedding the brains in an agarose solution warmer than 42 °C can result in tissue destruction and neuronal death, revealed by a loss of translucency of the brain or slices, which become opaque. However, the temperature should not be kept too low, as a solidifying agarose solution can destroy the fragile embryonic brain during the embedding process. Secondly, contamination can significantly reduce the yield of the experimental approaches described here. Thus, all steps should be carried out with care, under stringent sterile conditions as much as feasible. All solutions and equipment should be sterilized before use and equipment should be frequently sprayed with 70% ethanol to avoid contamination from either bacteria or mold. Contamination can be visible directly in the culture wells, as the culture medium becomes yellow or opaque. Contamination may go unnoticed when the culture medium remains clear and fluid. However, a layer of mold on the slice surface can usually be observed or the slices become excessively fragile during the fixation and staining steps. When such slices are visualized under the microscope, contamination may manifest as a layer of autofluorescence over labeled neurons or be revealed by the presence of long fluorescent filaments. Organotypic slices kept in contaminated wells should be thrown out, but the slices cultured in the other wells of the same plate can be kept for further steps. Bacterial contamination is quite rare but should be taken seriously, meaning that all equipment, including shared incubators, and culture room should be manually cleaned and sterilized.
Figure 1: Schematic representations of the protocols for ex utero electroporation followed by organotypic slice culture or MGE explants. A. Example of a biosafety cabinet setup with all sterilized instruments needed for the protocol described here. B. Schematic representation of the protocol used for the ex utero electroporation and organotypic slice cultures. Briefly, the embryos are decapitated, the experimental plasmid is injected in the lateral ventricle (1) and electroporated in the MGE (2). The brain is microdissected out of the skull (3) and embedded in agarose (4). Organotypic sections are generated on a vibratome (5) and placed in culture at 37 °C(6) for 48 h for time-lapse microscopy (7.1) or 72 h for cell reconstructions (7.2). C. Schematic representation of the protocol adapted from Myers et al. 201353 and used for the generation of MGE explants. Briefly, dorsolateral cortices are first dissected out from e12.5 to e14.5 wild-type mouse embryos (1) and dissociated mechanically in supplemented culture medium (2). Cortical cells are plated at a density of 5.25 x 105 cortical cells/cm2 and cultured for 2 h at 37 °C in a collagen/poly-L-lysine-coated 8-chambered coverslip (3). Then, e13.5 Dlx5/6Cre;RCEEGFP embryos are processed for ex utero electroporation of the MGE (4, 5), and the MGE is manually isolated from the brain and cut in 100 µm2 fragments (6). These explants are then placed on top of the previously prepared cortical feeder layer, covered with culture medium and co-cultured for 48 h before time-lapse imaging (7). Please click here to view a larger version of this figure.
Figure 2: Preserved cytoarchitecture in healthy organotypic slices. The generation of organotypic slice cultures after ex vivo electroporation of Nkx2.1Cre;RCEEGFP mouse embryos (A) does not result in significant tissue damage, as revealed by preserved cytoarchitecture (DAPI (blue) and Cre-reporter (GFP)), when compared to an 18 µm-thick cryosection from a Nkx2.1Cre;RCEEGFP embryo transcardially perfused with 4% PFA at e15.5. D and M indicate dorso-ventral and latero-medial axes, respectively. (B). High magnification images taken with an inverted confocal microscope equipped with a 63x/1.4 oil objective after staining with an anti-Cleaved-Caspase 3 antibody (Cl-cas3) reveal that approximately 20% of the cells in the cortical plate undergo apoptosis (white arrowheads) after 72 h in culture, while GFP-positive INs stay healthy (white arrow), as exemplified in the photomicrographs in C-C'''. By comparison, cellular apoptosis is almost completely absent from the thin cryosection from a perfused animal (D-D'''). Scale bars: 250 µm (A-B) and 15 µm (C-D'''). Please click here to view a larger version of this figure.
Figure 3: Organotypic slices of mice brain embryos and high magnification photomicrographs of electroporated interneurons (INs). A. An organotypic slice culture from a Dlx5/6Cre;RCEEGFP mouse brain (in which all INs are green) electroporated with a Dlx5/6::shRNAscrambled-IRES-TdTomato plasmid. The slice was fixed with 4% PFA after 72 h in culture, and immunostained for GFP and mCherry. Electroporated INs were imaged in 3D (50 – 60 µm-thick z-stacks with optical sections taken every 0.5 µm) using a confocal microscope equipped with a 63x/1.3 NA oil objective. INs migrating tangentially in the sub-ventricular zone of the dorsal pallium are readily identifiable (red, open arrow). D and M indicate dorso-ventral and latero-medial axes, respectively. B. A representative organotypic slice culture from a wildtype (WT) embryo electoporated with a control Dlx5/6::shRNAscrambled-IRES-TdTomato plasmid, fixed at 72 h and immunostained for mCherry only. Electroporated INs (red) are seen migrating dorsally towards the cortical plate. Electroporated INs are identified by their co-expression of TdTomato and EGFP で Dlx5/6Cre;RCEEGFP mice (C-D), or by their expression of TdTomato only in WT mice (E-H), and by their typical morphology, i.e. an oval cell body, a branched leading process (white arrowheads, D-H), an occasional trailing process (white arrow, C-D) and an occasional swelling of the leading process housing the centrosome before nucleokinesis (white star in C-C' and G). Scale bars: 250 µm (A-B) and 25 µm (C-H). Please click here to view a larger version of this figure.
Figure 4: Time-lapse live-imaging of electroporated INs in organotypic slices cultured for 48 h. INs electroporated at e13.5 with an experimental plasmid expressing the TdTomato cassette and a shRNA targeting a gene of interest are seen in tangential migration in an organotypic brain slice obtained from a Dlx5/6Cre;RCEEGFP mouse embryo after 48 h of culture (A, white square). In B, the same electroporated IN (white square) is seen in the process of nucleokinesis, while migrating tangentially in the cortex, i.e. parallel to the pial surface,and is followed in time-lapse imaging every 3 minutes for 8 h using a 20x/0.85 NA air objective (enlarged boxes, C-F). The neuron initially displays an elongated cell body (open arrow) in the process of nucleokinesis (C), as well as a trailing process (white arrow) and a branched leading process (white arrowheads). After 3 h of live-imaging, the nucleokinesis is completed, the trailing process has retracted, and the leading process is extending two long branches (D, white arrowheads). After 5 h 30 min, one of the leading process branch has retracted (white arrowheads) and the neuron cell body (open arrow) has moved forward about 10 µm (E). Finally, after 8 h of imaging, migration has paused, the neuron has extended its leading process again and a trailing process has appeared (white arrow), but the nucleus (open arrow) has not yet moved forward (F). Scale bars: 250 µm (A), 70 µm (B) and 30 µm (C-F). Please click here to view a larger version of this figure.
Figure 5: Time-lapse imaging of INs derived from an MGE explant cultured for 48 h. INs are seen migrating out of an MGE explant obtained from a Nkx2.1Cre;RCEEGFP mouse (in which all MGE-derived INs express eGFP) electroporated with the CMV::mCherry-LifeAct-7 plasmid at e13.5, using the method adapted from Myers et al. 201353 and schematized in Figure 1C, and cultured for 48 h (A). INs were visualized using time-lapse live-imaging for 5 h (B-E). In this example, one IN co-expressing eGFP and LifeAct is seen initially in the process of nucleokinesis (open arrow) and extends two leading process branches (white arrowheads; B). This IN completes nucleokinesis after 1 h (see open arrow), as the cell body has moved forward and a trailing process has appeared at the rear of the cell body (white arrow), and still displays one leading process with two branches (white arrowheads; C). A second nucleokinesis is under way after 2 h 30 min (open arrows) and the IN is now endowed with two leading processes originating from the cell body and a longer trailing process (white arrow; D). Finally, after 5 h, the IN retracts one neurite while translocating the centrosome in the remaining leading process branch (white arrowhead) in preparation for a third nucleokinesis, with a trailing process (white arrow) still present at the rear of the cell body (E). Scale bars: 70 µm (A) and 20 µm (B-E). Please click here to view a larger version of this figure.
Figure 6: High-resolution time-lapse imaging of actin remodeling in INs from an MGE explant cultured for 48 h. A. An organotypic slice from a Nkx2.1Cre;RCEEGFP mouse brain is fixed at e15.5, stained with Alexa-594 Phalloidin, allowing for the visualization of filamentous actin. INs are imaged using a 63x/1.3 NA oil objective on a confocal microscope. In healthy INs, filamentous actin is seen cupping the rear of the cell body following the retraction of the trailing process after completion of nucleokinesis (white arrow, A'-A'''). B. An MGE explant is obtained as above from a Nkx2.1Cre;RCEEGFP mouse brain carrying a targeted deletion of a gene of interest and electroporated with a plasmid expressing mCherry-Lifeact-7 under the control of the CMV promoter. Time-lapse live imaging is performed after 48 h of culture, and electroporated INs are followed every 3 minutes for 3 h using a 40x/0.85 air objective. Active remodeling of the actin cytoskeleton occurs in the IN transfected with LifeAct, as exemplified by the movement of red (white in the black and white images) fluorescent dots within the leading process and growth cones (white arrowheads) and at the rear of the cell body during nucleokinesis (B-B''', white arrows). Scale bars: 7 µm (A-A''') and 10 µm (B-B'''). Please click here to view a larger version of this figure.
In this article, we provide a reliable method for performing ex utero electroporation of the mouse MGE at e13.5 and for the generation of organotypic cultures of embryonic brain slices. Although in vitro methods, such as the Boyden Chamber Assay, are relatively easy to perform and can be used to assess the specific roles of different genes and proteins without the interference of other factors, they preclude the investigation of IN migration dynamics with regards to directionality and migration path25. MGE explants provide a useful means to study the dynamic cytoskeletal changes occurring during IN migration, as we show here, but they are devoid of most endogenous cues and often require the addition of guidance cues to promote neuronal migration (although this is significantly improved when MGE explants are cultured on cortical feeder layers)25,54. Nonetheless, assays based on MGE explants can fail to detect the implication of molecular cues involved in more subtle mechanisms such as those guiding the specific directionality or migration path of INs29. This problem was eventually circumvented by in utero electroporation25, which allows for the specific labeling of MGE-derived INs migrating in their native environment13,29,41. However, that technique is skill-challenging, due to the surgical procedures involved, and its yield is limited by the low survival rate of embryos and the fact that the MGE is difficult to target in utero, often requiring the use of multiple litters to reach significance55. Hence, ex utero electroporation of the MGE followed by organotypic culture of mice brain embryos provides a low-cost, time-efficient, and reliable method for investigating the migration dynamics and the morphology of MGE-derived INs in their natural environment, while circumventing the surgical procedures of in utero electroporation and the need for guidance cues in MGE explants. In addition, this technique allows an easier access to the MGE, which can be targeted by directly apposing the positive electrode under the neck and the negative one on top of the head, a configuration more difficult to adopt in utero. Alternatively, the MGE can be focally injected and electroporated directly after generating organotypic slices13,25,29, but that technique has proved more difficult and less effective in our hands than the protocol described here. By following the steps described in this article, one will obtain 50 – 100 electroporated MGE-derived INs per organotypic slice, 5 – 20 of which will be seen migrating tangentially out of the MGE after 72 h. Transfected INs can be visualized live with time-lapse imaging or imaged and reconstructed after fixation and immunohistochemical labeling.
The protocol described here was optimized to study IN migration ex vivo and was inspired by various published protocols describing in utero electroporation of MGE-derived INs, ex vivo MGE injection and electroporation, or the generation of chronic organotypic brain slice cultures36,38,39,42,43,56,57,58. Our approach limits potential damage to MGE progenitors by using lower pulse intensity (40 V) and intraventricular plasmid injections rather than intra MGE injections with high voltage pulses (100 V), as described elsewhere39,56,57,58. Furthermore, while others use a combination of penicillin, streptomycin and gentamycin to prevent bacterial contamination39,56,57,58, we have opted to avoid antibiotics in our culture medium since they can theoretically affect IN migration. In particular, penicillin is an antagonist of the GABAA receptor59,60, and GABAA receptor activation activates and later stops IN migration depending on intracellular chloride gradients and KCC2 expression at various phases of IN migration61. However, using the various precautions stated in the current protocol, contamination can be effectively avoided even in the absence of antibiotics.
Despite the efficiency of this approach in our hands, ex utero electroporation also has its disadvantages. While providing a natural three-dimensional environment for cells to migrate, it can be difficult to perform pharmacological assays in organotypic slices in the context of IN migration. Indeed, the migration of MGE-derived INs mostly depends on extracellular cues2,13,19 and the application of pharmacological inhibitors or activators on organotypic slices does not allow the precise dissociation of cell autonomous effects from global effects on the overall slice health or activity. For such experiments, MGE explants grown over mixed dissociated cortical cells might be preferable to organotypic slice cultures, since INs migrating out of the explant can be more readily isolated and exposed selectively to specific compounds62. Furthermore, although ex utero electroporation is easier to perform than in utero electroporation, it can still be technically challenging at the embryonic ages illustrated here given the small size and fragile state of embryonic brains at e13.5. Investigators will need a few trials to efficiently extract the electroporated brains at e13.5 without damaging the brain surface. In addition, as opposed to postnatal slices, embryonic organotypic slices cannot be kept in culture over long periods of time. Although embryonic organotypic slice cultures can be kept for at least 7 days in vitro63, this was not combined with electroporation and the experiments described here have been tested for up to 3 days in vitro with reliable results in our hands. Therefore, investigators should perform optimization tests beforehand if longer incubation times are needed. Further, the investigation of IN development at late embryonic or early postnatal stages is not recommended with this technique when using e13.5 embryos25, but can be achieved with in utero electroporation, where successfully electroporated embryos are put back into the uterine cavity and can be left to be born and analyzed at later stages21,64. Finally, ex utero electroporation followed by organotypic slice cultures allows for the analysis of both the morphology and the migration dynamics of developing INs. However, as it has been previously pointed out for the in utero electroporation technique36, ex utero electroporations yield 50 – 100 electoporated cells per brain slice and are thus not suitable for population analysis. Such investigations are better conducted in animal models carrying either a full or conditional deletion (or knock-in) of the gene of interest. When available, such models can then be efficiently used to generate organotypic slice cultures or MGE explants to visualize the actual dynamics of IN migration, as demonstrated here (see Figure 5 and Figure 6).
Many steps in this protocol should be carried out carefully in order to obtain optimal results. For instance, it is primordial that all the steps are performed under stringent sterile conditions as contamination can occur quite easily. Gloves and instruments used outside the biosafety cabinet should be sprayed with 70% ethanol frequently during the entire procedure. In addition, solutions such as culture media and artificial cerebrospinal fluid should be kept sterile and cold (4 °C), and made fresh every 2 – 3 weeks. To label MGE-derived INs more specifically, plasmids that will be used in such experiments should be cloned under the control of an IN-specific promoter (ex: Dlx5/649, Lhx665), instead of simply relying on the anatomical targeting of the MGE. The generation of organotypic slices requires the brain to stay alive. Thus, to preserve cell health and survival, this experiment should be conducted in less than 3 hours from the moment that the embryos are retrieved until the organotypic slices are put in culture. For time-efficiency, culture plates can be pre-filled with homemade culture medium just before starting the experiment and put in the 37 °C cell culture incubator until use. Furthermore, the brains should be carefully dissected out of the skull without any damage to the cortical surface in order to achieve proper embedding in the agarose solution and subsequent vibratome-sectioning. For instance, damage to the cortical surface, even minimal, may result in the detachment of the 250 µm-thick sections from the surrounding agarose gel or in degradation of the sections during vibratome sectioning. For neuronal survival, it is also critical that the agarose solution temperature remains close to 42 °C, as higher temperatures lead to tissue damage and cell death, whereas lower temperatures will preclude the proper embedding of the brain (or damage it during the embedding process). Once in culture, to avoid other contamination sources, the slices should not be manipulated until they are transferred to the microscope for imaging. These steps should be carried out in a sterilized environment and attention must be paid not to contaminate the plates after these manipulations, especially if they need to be put back in culture for subsequent re-imaging. Finally, we do not recommend recuperating a DNA aliquot mixed with loading dye from previous experiments for future use as we observed a considerable reduction in the yield of electroporated neurons with such material.
In conclusion, the ex utero electroporation and organotypic slice culture protocol described above allows for the specific labeling of MGE-derived INs at the single-cell level and can be used to genetically manipulate specific molecular pathways to study their role in regulating the morphological changes and migration dynamics of tangentially migrating INs. This method allows for the rapid and low-cost early functional investigation of novel candidate genes identified through single cell RNA sequencing of migratory INs66,67 or through Next Generation Sequencing of patients with neurodevelopmental disorders68,69,70. This technique has been extensively used to study migration in other cell populations, including pyramidal cells in the cortex and hippocampus70,71,72,73. Once mastered, it could potentially be used to image the recycling and trafficking of membrane proteins, such as receptors and channels using GFP-tagged proteins; the activation of specific cellular signaling cascades using biosensors74; or even the monitoring and manipulation of cellular activity using calcium imaging coupled to optogenetics in cortical INs, but also in other brain areas, such as the hippocampus, the amygdala or even the striatum.
The authors have nothing to disclose.
This work was supported by operating grants from the Savoy Foundation and the CURE Epilepsy Foundation and by equipment grants from the Canadian Foundation for Innovation to E.R (confocal microscope) and G.H (spinning disk confocal microscope). E.R. receives a career award from the Fonds de recherche du Québec-Santé (FRQ-S; Clinician-scientist Award) as well as from the Canadian Institutes for Health Research (CIHR; Young Investigator Award). G.H. is a senior scholar of the FRQ-S. L.E is the recipient of the Steriade-Savoy postdoctoral training award from the Savoy Foundation, the CHU Sainte-Justine Foundation postdoctoral training award and the FRQ-S postdoctoral training award, in partnership with the Foundation of Stars. This project has been made possible by Brain Canada through the Canada Brain Research Fund, with the financial support of Health Canada, awarded to L.E.
Neurobasal Medium | ThermoFisher Scientific | 21103049 | Commercially available neuron-specific culture medium. Complete formulation available on this website: https://www.thermofisher.com/ca/en/home/technical-resources/media-formulation.251.html |
B-27 serum-free supplement | ThermoFisher Scientific | 17504044 | 50X Serum-free neuron specific supplement |
15 mL sterile centrifuge tubes | Sarstedt | 62.554.002 | |
Leibovitz's (1X) L-15 Medium (+ L-Glutamine) | ThermoFisher Scientific | 11415064 | Commercially available neural-based culture medium supplemented with amino acids, vitamins and inorganic salts. Complete formulation available on the distributor's website |
L-Glutamine | Invitrogen | 25030-081 | |
Horse serum, heat inactivated | Millipore-Sigma | H1138-500ML | |
Neurocell supplement N-2 100X | Wisent | 305-016 | Botteinstein's N-2 Formulation |
VWR Square PETG Media Bottles 125 mL | VWR | 89132-062 | |
Class II Type A Biosafety Cabinet | Nuaire | NU-540 | |
Sucrose | BioShop | SUC700.1 | |
Sodium Chloride | BioShop | SOD001.1 | |
Sodium bicarbonate | ThermoFisher Scientific | S233-500 | |
D+ glucose | Millipore-Sigma | G7528-250G | |
Potassium Chloride | ThermoFisher Scientific | P217-500 | |
Sodium phosphate monobasic anhydrous | BioShop | SPM400.500 | |
Calcium chloride dihydrate | ThermoFisher Scientific | C79-500 | |
Magnesium sulfate heptahydrate | BiosShop | MAG522 | |
Agarose | BioShop | AGA002.500 | |
50 mL sterile centrifuge tubes | Sarstedt | 62.547.004 | |
1.5 mL centrifuge tubes | Sarstedt | 72.690.001 | |
P-97 Flaming/Brown Micropipette puller | Sutter Instruments Co. | Model P-97 | |
0.4 mm I.D. x 75 mm Capillary Tube | Drummond scientific | 1-000-800/12 | |
Ethanol | VWR | E193 | |
5 mL syringe | Becton Dickinson & Co | 309646 | |
Mineral Oil (heavy) | Rougier Pharma | ||
WPI Swiss Tweezers #5 | World Precision Instruments | 504511 | 11 cm, straight, 0.06×0.07mm tips, antimagnetic. You will need 2 of these. |
WPI Swiss Tweezers #7 | World Precision Instruments | 504504 | 11.5 cm, 0.18×0.2mm, curved tips |
HTC Tweezers | World Precision Instruments | 504617 | 11 cm, Straight, flat |
Operating scissors | World Precision Instruments | 501225 | 16 cm, Sharp/sharp, straight. You will need 3 of these. |
Dressing Forceps | World Precision Instruments | 501217 | 12.5 cm, straight, serrated |
Iris Forceps | World Precision Instruments | 504478 | 10.2 cm, full curve, serrated |
DeBakey Tissue Forceps | World Precision Instruments | 501996 | 15 cm, 45° angle, Delicate Jaw, 1.5mm wide |
Fisherbran Microspatula with rounded ends | FisherScientific | 21-401-5 | You will need 2 of these. |
Nanoject II Auto-Nanoliter Injector | Drummond scientific | 3-000-204 | |
TC Dish 60, Standard | Sarstedt | 83.3901 | 60-mm dish |
Tissue culture dish | Sarstedt | 83.1800 | 35-mm dish |
Black Wax | FisherScientific | S17432 | |
Transfer pipettes | Ultident | 170-CTB700-212 | 3 mL, small bulb |
Stereo Microscope | Leica Biosystems | Leica M80 | In replacement to our stereomicroscope which has been discontinued by the manufacturer (StereoMaster from FisherScientific) |
Electro Square Porator | BTX Harvard Apparatus | ECM 830 | |
Tweezertrodes, Plattinum Plated, 3mm | BTX Harvard Apparatus | 45-0487 | |
25G 1 1/2 | Becton Dickinson & Co | 305127 | |
Leica VT1000S Vibrating blade microtome | Leica Biosystems | VT1000S | |
GEM, Single edge razor blade | Electron Microscopy Sciences | 71952-10 | Remove the blunt end before inserting in the blade designated space of the vibratome |
µ-Slide 8 well | Ibidi | 80827 | Pack of 15 |
Millicell cell culture insert | Millipore-Sigma | PICM0RG50 | 30 mm, hydrophilic PTFE, 0.4 µm pore, pack of 50. |
Leica DMi6000 microscope | Leica Microsystems | N/A | |
Spinning disk confocal head Ultraview Vox | Perkin Elmer | N/A | |
Volocity 6.0 acquisition software | Improvision/Perkin Elmer | N/A | |
LiveCell Stage top incubation system | Pathology devices | LC30030 | Provides Temperature, CO2 and humidity control. |
SP8 confocal microscope | Leica | ||
mCherry-Lifeact-7 | Addgene | 54491 | Gift from Michael Davidson |
Fast Green FCF | Millipore-Sigma | F7258-25G | 25G bottle, certified by the Biological Stain Commission |