Novel, immunostaining-compatible tissue clearing techniques like the ultimate 3D imaging of solvent-cleared organs allow the 3D visualization of rabies virus brain infection and its complex cellular environment. Thick, antibody-labeled brain tissue slices are made optically transparent to increase imaging depth and to enable 3D analysis by confocal laser scanning microscopy.
The visualization of infection processes in tissues and organs by immunolabeling is a key method in modern infection biology. The ability to observe and study the distribution, tropism, and abundance of pathogens inside of organ tissues provides pivotal data on disease development and progression. Using conventional microscopy methods, immunolabeling is mostly restricted to thin sections obtained from paraffin-embedded or frozen samples. However, the limited 2D image plane of these thin sections may lead to the loss of crucial information on the complex structure of an infected organ and the cellular context of the infection. Modern multicolor, immunostaining-compatible tissue clearing techniques now provide a relatively fast and inexpensive way to study high-volume 3D image stacks of virus-infected organ tissue. By exposing the tissue to organic solvents, it becomes optically transparent. This matches the sample’s refractive indices and eventually leads to a significant reduction of light scattering. Thus, in combination with long free working distance objectives, large tissue sections up to 1 mm in size can be imaged by conventional confocal laser scanning microscopy (CLSM) at high resolution. Here, we describe a protocol to apply deep-tissue imaging after tissue clearing to visualize rabies virus distribution in infected brains in order to study topics like virus pathogenesis, spread, tropism, and neuroinvasion.
Conventional histology techniques mostly rely on thin sections of organ tissues, which can inherently provide only 2D insights into a complex 3D environment. Although feasible in principle, 3D reconstruction from serial thin sections requires demanding technical pipelines for both slicing and subsequent in silico alignment of the acquired images1. Moreover, seamless reconstruction of z-volumes after microtome slicing is critical as both mechanical and computational artifacts can remain because of suboptimal image registration caused by nonoverlapping image planes, staining variations, and physical destruction of tissue by, for instance, the microtome blade. In contrast, pure optical slicing of intact thick tissue samples allows the acquisition of overlapping image planes (oversampling) and, thereby, facilitates 3D reconstruction. This, in turn, is highly beneficial for the analysis of infection processes in complex cell populations (e.g., neuronal networks in the context of the surrounding glial and immune cells). However, inherent obstacles of thick tissue sections include light scattering and limited antibody penetration into the tissue. In recent years, a variety of techniques has been developed and optimized to overcome these issues2,3,4,5,6,7,8,9,10,11,12,13. Essentially, target tissues are turned optically transparent by treatment with either aqueous2,3,4,5,6,7,8,9 or organic solvent-based10,11,12,13 solutions. The introduction of 3DISCO (3D imaging of solvent-cleared organs)11,12 and its successor uDISCO (ultimate 3D imaging of solvent-cleared organs)13 provided a relatively fast, simple, and inexpensive tool with excellent clearing capabilities. The main constituents of the clearing protocol are the organic solvents tert-butanol (TBA), benzyl alcohol (BA), benzyl benzoate (BB), and diphenyl ether (DPE). The development and addition of iDISCO (immunolabeling-enabled 3D imaging of solvent-cleared organs)14, a compatible immunostaining protocol, constituted another advantage over existing methods and enabled the deep-tissue labeling of antigens of interest, as well as the long-term storage of immunostained samples. Thus, the combination of iDISCO14 and uDISCO13 allows for the high-resolution imaging of antibody-labeled proteins in large tissue sections (up to 1 mm) using conventional CLSM.
The preservation of an organ’s complex structure in all three dimensions is particularly important for brain tissue. Neurons comprise a very heterogeneous cellular subpopulation with highly diverse 3D morphologies based on their neurite projections (reviewed by Masland15). Furthermore, the brain consists of a number of compartments and subcompartments, each composed of different cellular subpopulations and ratios thereof, including glial cells and neurons (reviewed by von Bartheld et al.16). As a neurotropic virus, the rabies virus (RABV, reviewed by Fooks et al.17) primarily infects neurons, using their transport machinery to travel in retrograde direction along axons from the primary site of infection to the central nervous system (CNS). The protocol described here (Figure 1A) allows for the immunostaining-assisted detection and visualization of RABV and RABV-infected cells in large, coherent image stacks obtained from infected brain tissue. This enables an unbiased, 3D high-resolution assessment of the infection environment. It is applicable to brain tissue from a variety of species, can be performed immediately after fixation or after the long-term storage of samples in paraformaldehyde (PFA), and allows the storage and reimaging of stained and cleared samples for months.
RABV-infected, PFA-fixed archived brain material was used. The respective animal experimental studies were evaluated by the responsible animal care, use, and ethics committee of the State Office for Agriculture, Food Safety, and Fishery in Mecklenburg-Western Pomerania (LALFF M-V) and gained approval with permissions 7221.3-2.1-002/11 (mice) and 7221.3-1-068/16 (ferrets). General care and methods used in the animal experiments were carried out according to the approved guidelines.
CAUTION: This protocol uses various toxic and/or harmful substances, including PFA, methanol (MeOH), hydrogen peroxide (H2O2), sodium azide (NaN3), TBA, BA, BB, and DPE. MeOH and TBA are highly flammable. Avoid exposure by wearing appropriate personal protective equipment (a lab coat, gloves, and eye protection) and conducting experiments in a fume hood. Collect waste separately in appropriate containers and dispose of it according to local regulations. Rabies virus is classified as a biosafety level (BSL)-2 pathogen and can, therefore, generally be handled under BSL-2 conditions. Some activities, including procedures that may generate aerosols, work with high virus concentrations, or work with novel lyssaviruses, may require BSL-3 classification. Pre-exposure prophylaxis is recommended for high-risk personnel, including animal caretakers and laboratory workers18,19. Refer to local authority regulations.
1. Fixation of brain tissue and sectioning
2. Sample pretreatment with methanol
NOTE: Perform all incubation steps with gentle oscillation and, if not indicated otherwise, at room temperature. Protect the samples from light. The sample pretreatment serves the overall purpose of improving antibody diffusion and reducing tissue autofluorescence by exposure to MeOH and H2O2, respectively14.
3. Immunostaining
NOTE: Perform all incubation steps with gentle oscillation and, if not indicated otherwise, at room temperature. Protect the samples from light. To prevent microbial growth, add NaN3 to a final concentration of 0.02% to the solutions in this section. Tissue samples are further permeabilized by treatment with nonionic detergents Triton X-100 and Tween 20. Normal serum is used to block unspecific antibody binding. Glycine and heparin are added to reduce the immunolabeling background14.
4. Nuclear staining
NOTE: Perform all incubation steps with gentle oscillation and, if not indicated otherwise, at room temperature. Protect the samples from light. If no nuclear staining is required or the excitation wavelength/emission spectrum of TO-PRO-3 is required for the excitation or detection of another fluorophore, skip this step.
5. Tissue clearing
NOTE: Perform all incubation steps with gentle oscillation and, if not indicated otherwise, at room temperature. Protect the samples from light. The tissue samples are dehydrated in a graded series of TBA solutions. As immunostaining requires aqueous solutions, all staining procedures have to be finished prior to tissue clearing. Optical clearance and refractive index matching are achieved by treatment with a mixture of BA, BB, and DPE. The clearing solution is supplemented with DL-α-tocopherol as an antioxidant13.
6. Sample mounting
7. Imaging and image processing
The combination of iDISCO14 and uDISCO13 coupled with high-resolution CLSM provides deep insights into the spatiotemporal resolution and plasticity of RABV infection of brain tissue and the surrounding cellular context.
Using immunostaining of RABV phosphoprotein (P), complex layers of infected neuronal cells can be visualized in thick sections of mouse brains (Figure 3). Subsequently, seamless 3D projections of the acquired image stacks can be reconstructed (Figure 3A, B, right panel; Animated Figure 1). Care has to be taken when using primary antibodies from and secondary antibodies against the species the organ material originates from. The use of anti-mouse IgG antibodies on mouse brain tissue resulted in a distinct staining of the vascular system (Figure 3B, left panel). Because of the high resolution the image stacks are acquired with, infection can be assessed up to a single-cell level (Figure 4), allowing assertions on, for instance, the abundance and distribution of antigen within the cell (Figure 4C).
Aside from mouse brain tissue, the protocol can also be applied to brain tissue from other animal species (e.g., ferrets) (Figure 5; Animated Figure 2). Sections taken from different compartments of an infected ferret brain revealed a varying degree of RABV infection (Figure 5A-D).
As the brain comprises many different cellular subpopulations, differentiation between these populations is vital. Using antibodies directed against cell markers, assessment of the cellular identity of infected and neighboring cells is possible. For instance, astrocytes can be differentiated via the expression of glial fibrillary acidic protein (GFAP) (Figure 6A,C; Animated Figure 3), while neurites can be specifically stained for microtubule-associated protein 2 (MAP2) (Figure 6B,D; Animated Figure 4). Simultaneously, viral proteins, in this case, RABV nucleoprotein (N), can be costained to assess the relation between infected cells and the highlighted cellular subpopulation.
Figure 1: Basic principle and workflow of the protocol. (A) Graphical representation of the workflow based on the protocols from Renier et al.14 and Pan et al.13. (B) Two exemplary ferret brain slices, one before (left panel) and one after treatment with organic solvents (right panel). Clearing turns the tissue optically transparent as observable by the then readable text. The cleared brain slice is embedded in a 3D-printed imaging chamber (right panel). Please click here to view a larger version of this figure.
Figure 2: Technical illustration of the 3D-printed imaging chamber. (A) Exploded view drawing of the imaging chamber. The dot-dashed lines highlight components that have to be mounted on each other using RTV-1 silicone rubber. The dashed lines represent instructions for the subsequent assembly of the chamber. (B) CAD (computer-aided design) file of the imaging chamber. The corresponding .STL file to print the imaging chamber can be found in the Supplementary Materials. (C) Fully assembled imaging chamber. Please click here to view a larger version of this figure.
Figure 3: Deep-tissue imaging of RABV-infected mouse brain tissue. (A and B) Mice were infected with a recombinant vulpine street virus. RABV P staining (green) reveals infected neuronal layers with large, entangled neurite projections inside the cleared brain tissue. Nuclei were counterstained with TO-PRO-3 (blue). (B) The use of fluorophore-labeled anti-mouse IgG secondary antibodies (red) on mouse tissue results in a distinct labeling of the vascular system. The 3D reconstruction of the acquired image stacks enables observation from different viewing angles (A and B, right panels). Scale bars = 60 µm. Please click here to view a larger version of this figure.
Figure 4: High-resolution image acquisition enables complex assessments up to a single-cell level. The brain was dissected from an SAD L16-infected mouse. (A) RABV P staining (green) highlights an individually infected neuron. (B and C) Detail images and projections demonstrate that in-depth analyses of antigen abundance, distribution, and localization can be performed. Nuclei were counterstained with TO-PRO-3 (blue). Scale bars = 20 µm (A), 5 µm (C). Please click here to view a larger version of this figure.
Figure 5: Deep-tissue imaging of RABV-infected ferret brain tissue. Ferrets were infected with canine street RABV. (A–D) Slices from specified areas of the brain were taken, immunostained for RABV P (green), and optically cleared. Projections demonstrate that the infected cells in different parts of the brain differ in amount and morphology. Furthermore, they highlight the applicability of the protocol to tissues other than mouse-derived. Nuclei were counterstained with TO-PRO-3 (blue). Scale bars = 60 µm. Please click here to view a larger version of this figure.
Figure 6: Multicolor immunofluorescence allows the costaining of cellular markers. Brain tissue slices from ferrets infected with canine street RABV were used and coimmunostained for RABV N (red) and either (A and C) GFAP (green) or (B and D) MAP2 (green). Whereas GFAP is an astrocyte marker, MAP2 specifically highlights neurites. Nuclei were counterstained with TO-PRO-3 (blue). (C and D) At the bottom, single slice extractions of the enumerated detail views from the merged projections are depicted. Scale bars = 15 µm (A and B) 10 µm (C and D). Please click here to view a larger version of this figure.
Animated Figure 1: 3D reconstructions and detail projections of image stacks from RABV-infected mouse brains. The projections were generated from the image stacks described in Figure 3. (A and C) Animations of the entire respective z-stacks. (B) A detailed projection of a 3D reconstruction of a part of the z-stack of the areas highlighted at the beginning of the video. (D) A detailed projection of a tomogram of a part of the z-stack of the areas highlighted at the beginning of the video. Green = RABV P; red = mouse IgG; blue = nuclei. Please click here to view this video. (Right-click to download.)
Animated Figure 2: 3D reconstructions of image stacks acquired from an RABV-infected ferret brain. The projections were generated from the image stacks described in Figure 5. (A–D) The annotations refer to the same figure and describe the respective areas of the brain the slices were taken from. Green = RABV P; blue = nuclei. Please click here to view this video. (Right-click to download.)
Animated Figure 3: Gradual projection of the different channels of a 3D reconstruction of an RABV-infected ferret brain costained with astrocyte marker GFAP. Projections were generated from the image stack described in Figure 6A. The gradual addition of channels starts with RABV N (red), after which follow the cell nuclei (blue) and, finally, GFAP (green), while the subtraction first removes RABV N, then the cell nuclei, and eventually GFAP. Please click here to view this video. (Right-click to download.)
Animated Figure 4: Gradual projection of the different channels of a 3D reconstruction of an RABV-infected ferret brain costained with neuronal marker MAP2. Projections were generated from the image stack described in Figure 6B. The gradual addition of channels starts with RABV N (red), after which follow the cell nuclei (blue) and, finally, MAP2 (green), while the subtraction first removes RABV N, then the cell nuclei, and eventually MAP2. Please click here to view this video. (Right-click to download.)
The resurgence and further development of tissue clearing techniques in recent years2,3,4,5,6,7,8,9,10,11,12,13,14 have opened up many new possibilities to obtain high-volume image stacks of organ tissue. This provided an unparalleled and powerful tool to study, among many other topics, virus infection. The subsequent 3D reconstruction of these image stacks enables sophisticated assertions on, for instance, virus tropism, abundance, and the time course of infection. This protocol describes the immunolabeling-assisted visualization of RABV infection in solvent-cleared brain tissue.
There are several critical steps in the preparation and acquisition of the image stacks of immunolabeled, solvent-cleared tissue. Prolonged exposure to PFA can mask epitopes and, thus, result in decreased antigenicity20,21,22. It is, therefore, important to limit the fixation times to the necessary minimum and transfer the samples to an appropriate solution (e.g., PBS supplemented with 0.02% NaN3 for long-term storage). However, all representative images and projections provided here have been acquired from archived brain samples, some of which had been stored in PFA for weeks, highlighting the applicability of the technique to organ material that has been exposed to PFA for extended periods of time. Similar results have been shown for human brain samples13. Another, if not the most, critical step is the antibody incubation. Antibody concentrations have to be chosen carefully. While in most cases, standard IHC concentrations are a good starting point for deep-tissue antibody labeling, some antigens may require additional optimization of the antibody concentration. This protocol demonstrates that both RABV N and P are readily detectable by the used antibodies. While MeOH pretreatment usually improves immunolabeling, some antigens are incompatible with this treatment. For those, Renier and colleagues14 provided an alternative MeOH-free sample pretreatment. Analysis of the acquired image stacks requires adequate computational power. Because of the large file sizes of up to several gigabytes per stack, powerful computers are needed to process the images. Postprocessing often includes the subtraction of background noise and a bleach correction to compensate for acquisition-associated bleaching effects. When measuring distances, it has to be kept in mind that, as a side effect, the tissue is shrinking during the clearing process.
In comparison to other microscopy platforms, like light sheet fluorescence microscopy (LSFM) or two-photon laser scanning microscopy (2PLSM), CLSM has the most limited working distance. Therefore, it is necessary to preslice organs to 1 mm in thickness for imaging. Additionally, CLSM has the slowest acquisition speed because of its high imaging resolution. The use of a light sheet microscope would allow for faster imaging of larger volumes up to whole-brain imaging, while simultaneously sacrificing image resolution. Another limitation is the inherent increase of tissue autofluorescence with decreasing wavelength. This renders the use of fluorophores and dyes excited by the laser line at 405 nm, including Hoechst dyes, impractical to impossible.
With respect to other tissue clearing techniques, the hybrid of iDISCO14 and uDISCO13 combines the most positive attributes: it is highly compatible with immunostaining, highly versatile, comparatively fast and inexpensive, it has excellent clearing capabilities, and it is feasible with a standard confocal microscope. Moreover, this protocol is not restricted to the immunostaining and clearing of brain tissue but can also be applied to a variety of other soft tissues and pathogens, both neuroinvasive and non-neuroinvasive. In conclusion, the protocol described here represents a pipeline for high-resolution 3D imaging of RABV-infected brain tissue. The 3D reconstructions of infected brain tissue can be used to answer a variety of questions concerning RABV disease progression, pathogenesis, and neuroinvasion.
The authors have nothing to disclose.
The authors thank Thomas C. Mettenleiter and Verena te Kamp for critically reading the manuscript. This work was supported by the Federal Excellence Initiative of Mecklenburg Western Pomerania and the European Social Fund (ESF) Grant KoInfekt (ESF/14-BM-A55-0002/16) and an intramural collaborative research grant on Lyssaviruses at the Friedrich-Loeffler-Institute (Ri-0372).
Reagents | |||
Benzyl alcohol | Alfa Aesar | 41218 | Clearing reagent |
Benzyl benzoate | Sigma-Aldrich | BB6630-500ML | Clearing reagent |
Dimethyl sulfoxide | Carl Roth | 4720.2 | Various buffers |
Diphenyl ether | Sigma-Aldrich | 240834-100G | Clearing reagent |
DL-α-Tocopherol | Alfa Aesar | A17039 | Antioxidant |
Donkey serum | Bio-Rad | C06SBZ | Blocking reagent |
Glycine | Carl Roth | 3908.2 | Background reduction |
Goat serum | Merck | S26-100ML | Blocking reagent |
Heparin sodium salt | Carl Roth | 7692.1 | Background reduction |
Hydrogen peroxide solution (30 %) | Carl Roth | 8070.2 | Sample bleaching |
Methanol | Carl Roth | 4627.4 | Sample pretreatment |
Paraformaldehyde | Carl Roth | 0335.3 | Crystalline powder to make fixative solution |
Sodium azide | Carl Roth | K305.1 | Prevention of microbial growth in stock solutions |
tert-Butanol | Alfa Aesar | 33278 | Sample dehydration for tissue clearing |
TO-PRO-3 | Thermo Fisher | T3605 | Nucleic acid stain |
Triton X-100 | Carl Roth | 3051.2 | Detergent |
Tween 20 | AppliChem | A4974,0500 | Detergent |
Miscellaneous | |||
5 mL reaction tubes | Eppendorf | 0030119401 | Sample tubes |
Coverslip, circular (diameter: 22 mm) | Marienfeld | 0111620 | Part of imaging chamber |
Coverslip, circular (diameter: 30 mm) | Marienfeld | 0111700 | Part of imaging chamber |
Hypodermic needle (27 G x ¾” [0.40 mm x 20 mm]) | B. Braun | 4657705 | Filling of the imaging chamber with clearing solution |
RTV-1 silicone rubber | Wacker | Elastosil E43 | Adhesive for the assembly of the imaging chamber |
Ultimaker CPE 2.85 mm transparent | Ultimaker | 8718836374869 | Copolyester filament for 3D printer to print parts of the imaging chamber |
Technical equipment and software | |||
3D printer | Ultimaker | Ultimaker 2+ | Printing of imaging chamber |
Automated water immersion system | Leica | 15640019 | Software-controlled water pump |
Benchtop orbital shaker | Elmi | DOS-20M | Sample incubation at room temperature (~ 150 rpm) |
Benchtop orbital shaker, heated | New Brunswick Scientific | G24 Environmental Shaker | Sample incubation at 37 °C (~ 150 rpm) |
Confocal laser scanning microscope | Leica | DMI 6000 TCS SP5 | Inverted confocal microscope for sample imaging |
Fiji | NIH (ImageJ) | open source software (v1.52h) | Image processing package based on ImageJ |
Long working distance water immersion objective | Leica | 15506360 | HC PL APO 40x/1.10 W motCORR CS2 |
Vibratome | Leica | VT1200S | Sample slicing |
Workstation | Dell | Precision 7920 | CPU: Intel Xeon Gold 5118 GPU: Nvidia Quadro P5000 RAM: 128 GB 2666 MHz DDR4 SSD: 2 TB |
Primary antibodies | |||
Goat anti-RABV N | Friedrich-Loeffler-Institut | Monospecific polyclonal goat anti-RABV N serum, generated by goat immunization with baculovirus-expressed and His-tag-purified RABV nucleoprotein N Dilution: 1:400 |
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Rabbit anti-GFAP | Dako | Z0334 | Polyclonal antibody (RRID:AB_10013382) Dilution: 1:100 |
Rabbit anti-MAP2 | Abcam | ab32454 | Polyclonal antibody (RRID:AB_776174) Dilution: 1:250 |
Rabbit anti-RABV P 160-5 | Friedrich-Loeffler-Institut | Monospecific polyclonal rabbit anti-RABV P serum, generated by rabbit immunization with baculovirus-expressed and His-tag-purified RABV phosphoprotein P (see reference 23: Orbanz et al., 2010) Dilution: 1:1,000 |
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Secondary antibodies | |||
Donkey anti-goat IgG | Thermo Fisher Scientific | depending on conjugated fluorophore | Highly cross-absorbed Dilution: 1:500 |
Donkey anti-mouse IgG | Thermo Fisher Scientific | depending on conjugated fluorophore | Highly cross-absorbed Dilution: 1:500 |
Donkey anti-rabbit IgG | Thermo Fisher Scientific | depending on conjugated fluorophore | Highly cross-absorbed Dilution: 1:500 |
Goat anti-mouse IgG | Thermo Fisher Scientific | depending on conjugated fluorophore | Highly cross-absorbed Dilution: 1:500 |
Goat anti-rabbit IgG | Thermo Fisher Scientific | depending on conjugated fluorophore | Highly cross-absorbed Dilution: 1:500 |