We present here a protocol on how to prepare primary cultures of glial cells, astrocytes, and microglia from rat cortices for time-lapse video imaging of intracellular Ca2+ for research on pathophysiology of amyotrophic lateral sclerosis in the hSOD1G93A rat model.
This protocol demonstrates how to prepare primary cultures of glial cells, astrocytes, and microglia from the cortices of Sprague Dawley rats and how to use these cells for the purpose of studying the pathophysiology of amyotrophic lateral sclerosis (ALS) in the rat hSOD1G93A model. First, the protocol shows how to isolate and culture astrocytes and microglia from postnatal rat cortices, and then how to characterize and test these cultures for purity by immunocytochemistry using the glial fibrillary acidic protein (GFAP) marker of astrocytes and the ionized calcium-binding adaptor molecule 1 (Iba1) microglial marker. In the next stage, methods are described for dye-loading (calcium-sensitive Fluo 4-AM) of cultured cells and the recordings of Ca2+ changes in video imaging experiments on live cells.
The examples of video recordings consist of: (1) cases of Ca2+ imaging of cultured astrocytes acutely exposed to immunoglobulin G (IgG) isolated from ALS patients, showing a characteristic and specific response compared to the response to ATP as demonstrated in the same experiment. Examples also show a more pronounced transient rise in intracellular calcium concentration evoked by ALS IgG in hSOD1G93A astrocytes compared to non-transgenic controls; (2) Ca2+ imaging of cultured astrocytes during a depletion of calcium stores by thapsigargin (Thg), a non-competitive inhibitor of the endoplasmic reticulum Ca2+ ATPase, followed by store-operated calcium entry elicited by the addition of calcium in the recording solution, which demonstrates the difference between Ca2+ store operation in hSOD1G93A and in non-transgenic astrocytes; (3) Ca2+ imaging of the cultured microglia showing predominantly a lack of response to ALS IgG, whereas ATP application elicited a Ca2+ change. This paper also emphasizes possible caveats and cautions regarding critical cell density and purity of cultures, choosing the correct concentration of the Ca2+ dye and dye-loading techniques.
Cell culture techniques have given rise to numerous advancements in diverse fields of cellular neurophysiology in health and disease. Particularly, primary cell cultures, freshly isolated from the neuronal tissue of a lab animal, allow the experimenter to closely study the behavior of diverse cells in different biochemical media and physiological setups. Using different fluorescent physiological indicators such as the Ca2+-sensitive dyes in combination with time-lapse video microscopy provides better insight into the cellular biophysical and biochemical processes in real time.
ALS is a devastating neurodegenerative disease that affects upper and lower motor neurons1. The disease has a complex pathogenesis of the familial type but mostly of the sporadic form (90% of cases)2. It is well known that non-cell autonomous mechanisms contribute to ALS pathophysiology, primarily due to the essential role of glial cells3. ALS is also well characterized as a neuroinflammatory disease with involvement of humoral and cellular factors of inflammation.
Immunoglobulin G is widely used as a molecular marker in ALS and other neurodegenerative diseases. Studying the serum level of this marker can indicate the presence and stage of neuroinflammation in the disease4,5,6, while its presence in the cerebrospinal fluid can indicate a breach of the blood brain barrier7. IgGs were also identified as deposits in the spinal cord motor neurons of ALS patients7. Nevertheless, this approach has shown some inconsistencies in the correlation of the level of IgGs with the stage and characteristics of the disease6.
IgG isolated from the sera of ALS patients (ALS IgG) can induce a calcium response in naive astrocytes8 and glutamate release in neurons, pointing to an excitotoxic effect-a hallmark of ALS pathology9. However, studies on the hSOD1G93A ALS rat model (containing multiple copies of the human SOD1 mutation10) showed a number of markers of oxidative stress in cultured neuroglial cells11, tissues12,13,14, or live animals13. It is noteworthy that the astrocytes cultured from the ALS rat model were more prone to oxidative stress induced by peroxide than the astroglia from non-transgenic littermates11.
Microglial cells in culture are affected by ALS IgG in a less apparent way. Namely, a BV-2 microglial cell line displayed a rise in the signal from fluorescent markers of oxidative stress in response to the application of only 4/11 ALS IgG patient samples15. It is well known that microglia participate in many neuroinflammatory pathologies, adding to oxidative stress and late progression phase in the non-cell autonomous mechanism of ALS16,17. Nevertheless, the data with ALS IgGs indicated that these cells may not be as reactive as astrocytes to these humoral factors of ALS inflammation. Several studies have been conducted with primary astrocytes from ALS murine models, not only in pups but also in symptomatic animals, either on the brain or on the spinal cord18,19,20,21. This is also true for microglial primary cultures, although to a lesser extent than astrocytes and mostly from brain regions at the embryonic stage22,23,24.
We use time-lapse video imaging of Ca2+ on cells in culture primarily as a means to follow intracellular transients of this ion as a physiological marker of excitotoxicity. Thus, by biophysical characterization of these transients (amplitude, area under transient, rise-time, frequency) the researcher can obtain experimental diagnostic parameters from diverse cellular models of neurodegeneration. This technique thus offers an advantage of a quantitative physiological assessment of IgGs as disease biomarkers. There is a large body of literature on the role of IgGs and Ca2+ in the induction of ALS. Most of these studies were performed by inducing ALS by injecting patient IgGs into experimental animals25,26,27,28,29, which then showed intracellular Ca2+ elevation and IgG depositions. A line of studies explored the effect of ALS IgGs on the motor synapse in vitro30,31,32. In the above context, the technique presented here puts the focus on the glial cells as important players in the non-cell autonomous mechanism of ALS and quantifies their potential excitotoxic response to IgGs as humoral factors of neuroinflammation. This approach may have a wider application in testing other humoral factors such as whole sera, CSF, or cytokines in different cell culture systems and in cellular models of general inflammation.
This paper describes how to prepare primary cultures of glial cells, astrocytes, and microglia from the cortices of Sprague Dawley rats and how to further use these cells to study ALS pathophysiology with patient sera-derived IgG. Protocols are detailed for the dye-loading of cultured cells (Figure 1) and the recordings of Ca2+ changes in time-lapse video imaging experiments. Examples of video recordings will show how glial cells react to ALS IgG as compared to ATP, the latter activating purinergic membrane receptors. Shown for the first time is an example on how astrocytes isolated from the hSOD1G93A ALS rat brain react with a more pronounced Ca2+ response to ALS IgG compared to non-transgenic controls and how to relate this process to the differences in Ca2+ store operation. Also shown is an example of calcium imaging in microglial cells acutely challenged with ALS IgG, with only a modest response of intracellular calcium.
All experiments were performed in accordance with the EU directives on the protection of animals for scientific purposes and with permission from the Ethical Commission of the Faculty of Biology, University of Belgrade (approval number EK-BF-2016/08). Regarding patient material (sera for IgGs), it was collected for routine clinical examination with informed patient's consent in accordance with The Code of Ethics of the World Medical Association (Declaration of Helsinki) for experiments involving humans. The protocol was approved by the Ethics committee of the Clinical Center of Serbia (No. 850/6).
1. Primary cell culture preparation
2. Immunocytochemistry
3. Time-lapse video imaging
NOTE: Solutions containing the fluorescent dye should be protected from direct light. Before starting the imaging experiment, make sure that the glass coverslip does not move when turning on the perfusion.
4. Data analysis
Characterization of different glial cell types in culture
It usually takes 15-21 days to produce astrocytes for experiments, while microglial cells take 10-15 days to grow. Immunostaining was performed to assess the cell purity of the culture. Figure 1 shows the expression of double labeling of the astrocytic marker GFAP and the microglial marker Iba1 in respective cultures.
Calcium imaging is known to reveal the differences in cell physiology of healthy and diseased astrocytes. Previously in wild type astrocytes, we demonstrated that ALS IgG affects cellular Ca2+ by mobilizing intra- and extracellular pools into the cytosol8. The following protocol determined whether there were differences between the calcium transients in hSOD1G93A and non-transgenic cultured astrocytes acutely exposed to ALS IgG samples from patients. Astrocytes loaded with Fluo4-AM were perfused with ECS for 3 min to obtain a stable baseline. Next, 100 µg/mL ALS IgG was applied in the bath for 5 min. Astrocytes were washed with ECS, and then 100 µM ATP was applied at the end of each recording to test the health of each cell and observe the calcium response to a standard stimulus.
Representative traces in Figure 2A,B show that hSOD1G93A astrocytes respond to ALS IgG with a greater amplitude of the calcium transient, a larger overall integrated change, and a shorter time-to-peak than non-transgenic astrocytes. Here, however, one should exercise caution in interpreting quantitative data when single-wavelength Ca2+-probes such as Fluo4-AM are used (see the discussion section). Additionally, the form of the response to ALS IgG is distinguishable from the response to ATP (note a faster transient with a greater amplitude in the traces and cell synchronicity in pseudocolor images in response to ATP, Figure 2A,B).
With the goal to further study the origin of the differences in the calcium response to ALS IgG and ATP between hSOD1G93A and non-transgenic astrocytes, we used a pharmacological approach to manipulate internal Ca2+ stores during calcium imaging by using 1 µM Thg. Thg is a non-selective inhibitor of the endoplasmic reticulum Ca2+ ATPase (SERCA), depleting the intracellular Ca2+ stores almost immediately, which is reflected in a calcium transient lasting over several minutes. To exclude the effect of external Ca2+ in the observed phenomena, ECS deprived of Ca2+ was used during the experiment. After recording the basal level of the fluorescence for 3 min, 1 µM Thg was applied in the bath for 2 min. Following Thg-induced calcium depletion, the astrocytes were perfused with ECS containing Ca2+ to induce and monitor the refilling of the stores. Representative traces of the described experiment are shown in Figure 2C,D. As expected, hSOD1G93A astrocytes had a higher level of Ca2+ in the stores, as revealed by store depletion, indicating an overload of this ion. A similar mechanism has been demonstrated in cultured astrocytes from SOD1G93A transgenic mice36.
Calcium imaging of microglial cells in culture
Timelapse imaging of microglia labeled with Fluo-4 AM was performed in the same way as described for astrocytes (Figure 3B). Microglial cells were perfused with ECS with 2 mM Ca2+ for 3 min to obtain a stable baseline, followed by bath application of 100 µg/mL ALS IgG for 5 min, washing with ECS, and stimulation with 100 µM ATP. Interestingly, while astrocytes readily respond to ALS IgG, a vast majority of microglial cells did not respond to ALS IgG (as illustrated by only one microglial cell reacting with a calcium transient; red trace in the example of Figure 3A). However, they always responded to ATP and in a similar manner as astrocytes (Figure 3A). Note also a case of a spontaneous Ca2+ transient in the cell trace 2 (Figure 3A) that should not be mistaken for an induced response.
Figure 1: Astrocytes and microglia in a primary culture. Representative confocal images of astrocytes (left) in culture labeled using GFAP (red) and microglia (right) in a culture stained with Iba1 (green). Double labeling (GFAP/Iba1) was used to indicate culture purity. DAPI was used to label nuclei (blue). Scale bars = 50 µm. Abbreviations: GFAP = glial fibrillary acidic protein; lba1 = ionized calcium-binding adaptor molecule 1; DAPI = 4',6-diamidino-2-phenylindole. Please click here to view a larger version of this figure.
Figure 2: An example of calcium imaging application in a study of astrocyte pathophysiology. (A) A representative example of a calcium imaging experiment where hSOD1G93A astrocytes were imaged for 5 min to collect baseline fluorescence ('baseline'), followed by an acute application of ALS IgG (0.1 mg/mL) for 5 min ('response to ALS IgG'), and a treatment with 100 µM ATP ('response to ATP'). The top panel shows pseudocolor images (intensity of fluorescence is color-coded, where black corresponds to very low intensity, while white marks pixels with highest intensity; color-intensity relation is represented in a color bar on the right in the top panel of B that corresponds to the fluorescence intensity of an individual cell in each of the segments of the experiment ('baseline', 'response to ALS IgG', and 'response to ATP'). The gray dashed lines point to the pseudocolor images of specific time points for the representative calcium trace (in orange). The gray box in the middle of the calcium trace marks the 5 min application of ALS IgG. Black bar under the calcium trace marks the application of ATP. (B) Same as in (A) except for non-transgenic astrocytes (trace in blue). (C) A representative calcium trace (orange) in hSOD1G93A astrocyte challenged with 1 µg/mL thapsigargin (black bar under the trace) in ECS without calcium, followed by the addition of 2 mM Ca2+ ('2 mM Ca2+', black bar under the trace). (D) Same as in (C) except for the non-transgenic astrocyte (trace is in blue). Amplitude scale = 100% ΔF/F0. Time scale = 200 s. Scale bars = 50 µm. (E) Scheme of the experimental setup depicting the custom-made mode of solution exchange and the placement of the pipette for biochemical agent application. Abbreviations: ALS = amyotrophic lateral sclerosis; IgG = immunoglobulin G; Thg = thapsigargin. Please click here to view a larger version of this figure.
Figure 3: An example of calcium imaging of cultured microglia. (A) Left: Brightfield image of cultured microglia. Since it is difficult to obtain a pure microglial culture, astrocytes are also present here (bigger flat polygonal cells, see example indicated by arrowhead). Both ramified (small soma, prominent processes) and amoeboid microglia (indicated with green and yellow boxes, respectively) are present in the culture. Middle: Enlarged yellow and cyan boxes from the left. Red, blue, and violet lines mark the ROIs from which the mean fluorescence intensity over time is extracted. Right: Calcium traces of three cells in the middle panel. The color of the trace corresponds to the color of the ROIs in the middle panel. After imaging the baseline calcium fluorescence ('baseline fluorescence') for 200 s, cells were exposed to an acute application of ALS IgG (0.1 mg/mL) for 5 min ('response to ALS IgG'), followed by 100 µM ATP ('response to ATP'). The gray box in the middle of the calcium trace marks the 5 min application of ALS IgG. The black bar under the calcium trace marks the application of ATP. Note that only cell 1 (red trace) representing a large minority of cells, responded to ALS IgG, while all cells responded to ATP. (B) Pseudocolor images represent the fluorescence intensity in each of the segments of the recordings ('baseline', 'response to ALS IgG', and 'response to ATP') where orange dashed lines point to the specific time points in the representative calcium traces (A, right panel). Green and orange boxes mark amoeboid microglia (same as in A). Color-intensity relation is represented in a color bar on the right. Amplitude scale = 100% ΔF/F0. Time scale = 100 s. Scale bars = 50 µm. Abbreviations: ALS = amyotrophic lateral sclerosis; IgG = immunoglobulin G; ROI = region of interest. Please click here to view a larger version of this figure.
This paper presents the method of primary cell culturing as a fast and "on the budget" tool for studying different aspects of cell (patho)physiology such as ALS in the rat hSOD1G93A model. The technique is thus suitable for studies at the single-cell level that can be extrapolated and further investigated at a higher level of organization (i.e., in tissue slices or in a live animal). Cell culturing as a technique, however, has a few caveats. It is most critical to do the brain tissue isolation and the dissociation of cells on ice and to perform these and subsequent stages of isolation and preparation in the shortest possible time. Contamination is an ever-present hurdle that can be overcome by using well-sterilized equipment and taking particular care in performing tissue dissociation in the laminar hood37. It is also critical to seed the correct density of cells. If the number of cells seeded is less than the desired number, this will not support the cell growth and propagation in the dish. However, if cells are too dense, there will be competition among them for the nutrients in the growth medium, and, thus, more cell death. This is why it is advisable to count the dissociated cells before seeding, at least before some experience is gained regarding the correct relation of the starting tissue and the dissociation volume.
GFAP is a widely used astrocyte marker and is often used to assess cell culture purity38,39. However, only GFAP is not sufficient when studying astrocyte reactivity. It is advised to combine it with a proliferation marker such as Ki67 or other astrocyte markers (glutamine synthetase, aldolase-C, or aldehyde dehydrogenase-1)18,38. Although these techniques tend to yield pure glial cell-type cultures, care needs to be taken in assessing culture cell purity. This is of particular importance for microglial cell cultures that usually contain some oligodendrocyte precursors or astrocytes34. Specific markers for microglial cells attract a lot of interest. The most used marker is Iba1, but other often-used markers, such as differentiation receptors (CD68, CD45) and fractalkine receptor (CX3CR1), can be detected in other cells too (for more detail, see40). Currently, the most specific markers for microglia are TMEM119 and the purinergic receptor P2Y1241, although a recent paper has raised concern regarding TMEM119 specificity42.
Introduction of timelapse live-cell imaging offers the advantage of monitoring cellular processes, such as Ca2+ signaling, in real time. In addition, the modulation of cell behavior by applying different chemical agents (e.g., Thg here) gives further information for the description of the pathways and signal messengers activated in a healthy cell or a cellular disease model (isolated and cultivated here from the hSOD1G93A ALS rat). When working with cell membrane-permeable fluorescent dyes such as Fluo-4 AM, it is critical to find the correct concentration and incubation time for the dye to fill the interior of the cell. If it takes too long, the dye uptake can be augmented by keeping the cells in an incubator at 37 °C. In more severe cases, a mild detergent (e.g., Pluronic F-127) may be used in the loading solution. It is also not advised to achieve the above by raising the concentration of the dye over 10 µM. In fact, at higher concentrations, the dye may act as a Ca2+ buffer and dampen the Ca2+ signal amplitude.
It is also worth mentioning that in addition to Fluo-4 and similar single-wavelength dyes, there exist Ca2+ -sensitive ratiometric dyes (e.g., Fura-2) that emit at one measuring and at one Ca2+ -insensitive reference wavelength. Such measurements are thus insensitive to the bias caused by uneven dye distribution in the cell and to changes in the optical path. Nevertheless, using single-wavelength dyes, especially with high-affinity indicators such as Fluo-4, is advisable in cases where relative measurements are made within the same sample, or where one follows primarily the dynamics of the process and not real Ca2+ concentration changes43. Nevertheless, these measurements cannot be used for quantitative data in terms of Ca2+ concentration, and caution is necessary when interpreting amplitudes from the data as presented in Figure 2.
We have demonstrated here how using this imaging facility on living cells-astrocytes in culture-may reveal subtle intracellular mechanisms of pathophysiology such as the replenishment of Ca2+ stores and store-operated Ca2+ entry, that are disturbed in the ALS model, in accordance with previous results on murine cells36. This could then explain a higher sensitivity of hSOD1G93A astrocytes to ALS IgG as suggested here, that may potentiate the progression of the pathology. To compare measurements in such experiments, it is advisable to have a similar cell density in the field of view and that the same cell compartments are taken for ROIs (e.g., soma vs processes).
An example was shown here that microglial cells did not respond to ALS IgG with the same vigor as astrocytes. This is in line with the finding of the scarce generation of peroxide in the microglial cell line upon ALS IgG treatment15. Altogether, this approach points to a cell-specific response to IgG related to ALS, also an important fact realized through the use of pure cell cultures of microglia versus astroglia. Using the glial cells from the models of neuropathophysiology or derived from patients' inducible pluripotent stem cells has the future of physiological biomarking in severe neural diseases such as ALS. It would thus be essential to understand fine Ca2+ signaling as the fingerprint of the particular state of the disease or to distinguish among different excitotoxic diseases. For these purposes, a machine learning procedure needs to be developed and data recordings categorized. In addition, these cells can be grown in culture and seeded in a microfluidic device to be used for diagnosis or for patient stratification of neurodegenerative disease by means of evoking a response to diverse humoral factors of neuroinflammation (e.g., sera, IgG, CSF).
The authors have nothing to disclose.
This work was supported by the Ministry of Education Science and Technological Development Republic of Serbia Contract No. 451-03-9/2021-14/ 200178, the FENS – NENS Education and Training Cluster project "Trilateral Course on Glia in Neuroinflammation", and the EC H2020 MSCA RISE grant #778405. We thank Marija Adžić and Mina Perić for supplying the immunohistochemistry images and Danijela Bataveljić for help with paper writing.
15 mL tube | Sarstedt, Germany | 62 554 502 | |
2 mL tube | Sarstedt, Germany | 72.691 | |
21 G needle | Nipro, Japan | HN-2138-ET | |
23 G needle | Nipro, Japan | HN-2338-ET | |
5 mL syringe | Nipro, Japan | SY3-5SC-EC | |
6 mm circular glass coverslip | Menzel Glasser, Germany | 630-2113 | |
60 mm Petri dish | ThermoFisher Sientific, USA | 130181 | |
ATP | Sigma-Aldrich, Germany | A9062 | |
AxioObserver A1 | Carl Zeiss, Germany | ||
Bovine serum albumine | Sigma-Aldrich, Germany | B6917 | |
Calcium chloride | Sigma-Aldrich, Germany | 2110 | |
Centrifuge | Eppendorf, Germany | ||
DAPI | Sigma-Aldrich, Germany | 10236276001 | |
D-glucose | Sigma-Aldrich, Germany | 158968 | |
DMEM | Sigma-Aldrich, Germany | D5648 | |
Donkey-anti goat AlexaFluor 647 IgG antibody | Invitrogen, USA | A-21447 | |
Donkey-anti mouse AlexaFluor 488 IgG antibody | Invitrogen, USA | A-21202 | |
EDTA | Sigma-Aldrich, Germany | EDS-100G | |
EGTA | Sigma-Aldrich, Germany | E4378 | |
”evolve”-EM 512 Digital Camera System | Photometrics, USA | ||
Fetal bovine serum (FBS) | Gibco, ThermoFisher Scientific, USA | 10500064 | |
Fiji ImageJ Software | Open source under the GNU General Public Licence | ||
FITC filter set | Chroma Technology Inc., USA | ||
Fluo-4 AM | Molecular Probes, USA | F14201 | |
Goat anti-Iba1 | Fujifilm Wako Chemicals, USA | 011-27991 | |
HEPES | Biowest, France | P5455 | |
HighSpeed Solution Exchange System | ALA Scientific Instruments, USA | ||
Incubator | Memmert GmbH + Co. KG, Germany | ||
Magnesium chloride | Sigma-Aldrich, Germany | M2393 | |
Matlab software | Math Works, USA | ||
Mouse anti-GFAP | Merck Millipore, USA | MAB360 | |
Mowiol 40-88 | Sigma-Aldrich, Germany | 324590 | |
Normal donkey serum | Sigma-Aldrich, Germany | D9663 | |
Paraformaldehyde | Sigma-Aldrich, Germany | 158127 | |
Penicilin and Streptomycin | ThermoFisher Sientific, USA | 15140122 | |
Poly-L-lysine | Sigma-Aldrich, Germany | P5899 | |
Potassium chloride | Sigma-Aldrich, Germany | P5405 | |
Potassium dihydrogen phosphate | Carlo Erba Reagents, Spain | 471686 | |
Shaker DELFIA PlateShake | PerkinElmer Life Sciencies, USA | ||
Sodium bicarbonate | Sigma-Aldrich, Germany | S3817 | |
Sodium chloride | Sigma-Aldrich, Germany | S5886 | |
Sodium phosphate dibasic heptahydrate | Carl ROTH GmbH | X987.2 | |
Sodium pyruvate | Sigma-Aldrich, Germany | P5280 | |
Thapsigargine | Tocris Bioscience, UK | 1138 | |
Triton X – 100 | Sigma-Aldrich, Germany | T8787 | |
Trypsin | Sigma-Aldrich, Germany | T4799 | |
Vapro Vapor Pressure Osmometer 5520 | Wescor, ELITechGroup Inc., USA | ||
ViiFluor Imaging System | Visitron System Gmbh, Germany | ||
VisiChrome Polychromator System | Visitron System Gmbh, Germany | ||
VisiView high performance setup | Visitron System Gmbh, Germany | ||
Xenon Short Arc lamp | Ushio, Japan |