Source: Reimels, T. A. and Pfleger, C. M. Methods to Examine the Lymph Gland and Hemocytes in Drosophila Larvae. J. Vis. Exp. (2016).
This video describes the Drosophila lymph gland—the primary site of hematopoiesis in the fly larva—and shows an example protocol to dissect and mount the organ for immunohistochemistry and fluorescent imaging.
This protocol is an excerpt from Reimels and Pfleger, Methods to Examine the Lymph Gland and Hemocytes in Drosophila Larvae, J. Vis. Exp. (2016).
1. Larval Lymph Gland Immunohistochemistry
NOTE: The lymph gland is located approximately one-third length from the anterior end of a larva slightly below the brain on the dorsal side. (See arrow in Figure 1B.) The lymph gland flanks the dorsal vessel and is most easily dissected attached to the mouth hooks or to the brain. Wild-type, third instar lymph glands are very small structures; the primary lobes are approximately 100 – 200 µm in length. (See Figure 2A.)
2. Imaging
Figure 1: In Vivo Crystal Cell Melanization. A) Larvae were placed individually in PCR tubes prior to heating. Red arrows indicate larvae that are not at the bottom of the tubes. B) A typical crystal cell melanization pattern after heating, which sometimes reveals the lymph gland (arrow; dorsal side shown, anterior is left). Scale bar represents 1 mm. Please click here to view a larger version of this figure.
Figure 2: Larval Lymph Gland Immunohistochemistry. A) A DIC image of a third instar larval lymph gland showing the dorsal vessel (dv), primary lobes (1°), and secondary lobes (2°). Scale bar represents 100 µm. B) A representative third instar larval lymph gland from a larva genetically expressing EBFP2 in the medullary zone and GFP in the posterior signaling center. The lymph gland was stained with an antibody against the Notch intracellular domain (red). Unaltered image taken with a fluorescence microscope (top). The same image after deconvolution (bottom). Scale bars represent 20 µm. Please click here to view a larger version of this figure.
PBS tablets | MP Biomedicals | 2810305 | |
dissecting dish | Corning | 7220-85 | |
microcentrifuge tube | Denville | C2170 | |
silicone dissecting pad, made from Sylgard 184 kit | Krayden (distributed through Fisher) | NC9644388 (Fisher catalog number) | Made in petri dish by mixing components of Sylgard elastomer kit according to manufacturer instructions. |
stereomicroscope | Morrell Instruments (Nikon distributor) | mna42000, mma36300 | Nikon models SMZ1000 and SMZ645 |
tissue wipe | VWR | 82003-820 | |
forceps | Electron Microscopy Sciences | 72700-DZ | |
p200 pipette | Eppendorf | 3120000054 | |
formaldehyde | Fisher | BP531-500 | |
Triton | Fisher | BP151-500 | |
Tween 20 | Fisher | BP337-500 | |
bovine serum albumin | Rocky Mountain Biologicals | BSA-BSH-01K | |
normal goat serum | Sigma | G9023-10ML | |
normal donkey serum | Sigma | D9663-10ML | |
200 proof ethanol | VWR | V1001 | |
N-propyl gallate | MP Biomedicals | 102747 | |
glycerol | VWR | EM-4750 | |
DAPI (4',6-diamidino-2-phenylindole) | Fisher | 62248 | |
microscope cover glass, 18 mm circular | Fisher | 12-545-100 | |
glass microscope slides | Fisher | 22-034-980 | |
24-well plate | Corning | 351147 | |
disposable transfer pipet | Fisher | 13-711-9AM | |
fluorescence microscope | Zeiss | Axio Imager.Z1 |