Here, we present protocols and tools for visualizing calcium during fertilization and early embryogenesis using a genetically encoded calcium reporter expressed in the germline of the model nematode C. elegans.
Calcium is an important signaling molecule during the oocyte-to-embryo transition (OET) and early embryogenesis. The hermaphroditic nematode Caenorhabditis elegans provides several unique advantages for the study of the OET as it is transparent and has an ordered gonad that produces one mature oocyte every ~23 min at 20 °C. We have modified the genetically encoded calcium indicator jGCaMP7s to fluorescently indicate the moment of fertilization within a living organism. We have termed this reporter "CaFE" for Calcium during Fertilization in C. elegans. The CaFE reporter was engineered into a safe harbor locus in single copy, has no significant impact on physiology or fecundity, and produces a robust signal upon fertilization. Here, a series of protocols is presented for utilizing the CaFE reporter as an in vivo tool for dissecting the OET and embryogenesis. We include methods to synchronize worms, examine the effects of RNAi knockdown, mount worms for imaging, and to visualize calcium in oocytes and embryos. Additionally, we present the generation of additional worm strains to aid in this type of analysis. Demonstrating the utility of the CaFE reporter to visualize the timing of fertilization, we report that double ovulation occurs when ipp-5 is targeted by RNAi and that only the first oocyte undergoes immediate fertilization. Furthermore, the discovery of single-cell calcium transients during early embryogenesis is reported here, demonstrating that the CaFE reporter persists into early development. Importantly, the CaFE reporter in worms is simple enough to use for incorporation into course-based undergraduate research (CURE) laboratory classes. The CaFE reporter, coupled with the ordered gonad and ease of RNAi in worms, facilitates inquiry into the cell-cell dynamics required to regulate internal fertilization and early embryogenesis.
Fertilization marks the beginning of a new life cycle, but defining the precise moment of fertilization is challenging. A conserved feature of fertilization is a wave of calcium across the oocyte immediately after sperm fusion1. Although the nature of the calcium wave, in terms of frequency and speed, differs across species, nearly all organisms exhibit a transitory increase in intracellular calcium after fertilization. The calcium wave plays a critical role in a block to polyspermy, egg activation, and other important cellular events2. Since the calcium wave initiates at the site of sperm fusion, calcium serves as a marker for fertilization3.
Caenorhabditis elegans is an ideal model organism for studying early development. The worms are transparent hermaphrodites that are genetically tractable4. Most importantly for the study of fertilization, C. elegans adults continuously produce oocytes using a strictly ordered gonad5. In fact, oocytes are the only new cells produced as the soma is post-mitotic in adulthood6. Figure 1 highlights the gonad, which consists of 2 symmetrical U-shaped tubes of developing oocytes. The oocyte closest to the spermatheca (storage organ for sperm) is termed the -1 oocyte. This assembly-line design of the worm gonad ovulates a mature oocyte into the spermatheca every ~23 min at 20 °C in young adults7. The newly fertilized embryo then moves into a shared uterus before being laid through a single vulva.
Previous techniques to visualize calcium during fertilization in C. elegans relied upon microinjection of calcium-sensitive dyes3,8. To more easily view the calcium wave upon sperm-egg fusion, a genetically encoded calcium indicator based on jGCaMP7s was inserted in single-copy at a safe harbor locus using clustered regularly interspaced short palindromic repeats (CRISPR)7,9. The reporter was termed CaFE for Calcium during Fertilization in C. elegans. The reporter shows no significant defects in physiology or fecundity.
Here, protocols are presented for visualization of the calcium wave in the oocytes and embryos of C. elegans using the CaFE reporter. Combined with the myriad tools available in the worm community, such as RNA interference (RNAi) and mCherry gonad markers, the CaFE reporter facilitates investigation into the regulation of internal fertilization events, particularly fertilization competence and the timing of fertilization. Additionally, the CaFE reporter persists into early development and is a unique tool to probe embryogenesis.
A simple tool with a robust protocol is a potent combination to tackle difficult scientific questions. Here, methods for the visualization of calcium as an easily detectable proxy for fertilization are presented using the CaFE reporter. This same reporter persists into early embryogenesis and also allows the visualization of calcium transients further into development. Calcium signaling serves as a critical second messenger that demarcates major shifts in cellular function, particularly for developmental biology. In the oocyte, the first burst phase of the calcium wave marks not just the timing of fertilization but also the site of sperm fusion3. In C. elegans, the A-P axis is also determined by the site of sperm fusion23. Therefore, the ability to visualize calcium in oocytes and embryos allows for the investigation of complex questions that are central to cell and developmental biology.
The method described here with the CaFE reporter should be straightforward enough for nematode novices. Previous methods to detect calcium waves in oocytes of C. elegans relied upon dye injection3,8,14. While these studies were important and illuminating, dye injection is labor-intensive, and injection equipment is not available in every lab.
The protocols presented here have been optimized for healthy worms. To maximize the chance for success, ensure that there is no contamination on the worm media or in the bacteria lawn on which the worms feed. Do not expose the worms to stress conditions, such as temperature, as these will affect ovulation and fertilization. Additionally, controls for RNAi efficacy should be included with every experiment as efficacy decreases over time. Use a positive control for RNAi efficacy like egg-5, which generates embryos, but no viable progeny as eggshell formation is compromised24. Furthermore, the image capture parameters must be optimized for each microscopy system. Our specifications are included here as a reference, but deviations are to be expected. Although this system readily detects cytoplasmic calcium as a proxy for fertilization, it does not necessarily represent a bona fide sperm-oocyte fusion event.
The wide array of tools and mutants freely distributed within the worm community enhance the utility of the CaFE reporter. The reporter is integrated into the worm genome and is easily crossed into other mutant or reporter C. elegans strains25. Reported here is the creation of EAG25 expressing the CaFE reporter with a histone H2B-mCherry marker to visualize nuclei (Figure 1) and EAG28 with both the CaFE reporter and a pleckstrin-homology domain-mCherry marker, which highlights the cell periphery (Figure 2)13,26. Both strains aid in the visualization of cells in the germline and during embryogenesis. Furthermore, the facility of RNAi in
C. elegans, when used with the CaFE reporter, have revealed new insights into fertilization competence. As shown in the double ovulation induced by ipp-5 RNAi knockdown in Figure 3, the presence of sperm and an ovulated oocyte is insufficient to stimulate a fertilization event.
These results indicate that another signal, or the absence of an inhibitor, must exist that allows the oocyte to become fertilized. The prematurely ovulated oocyte displays a delayed calcium transient when the oocyte moves into the uterus. This late calcium wave suggests that the prematurely ovulated -2 oocyte can develop fertilization competency with time. We anticipate that studies on the timing of fertilization, particularly with regard to cell-cell signaling and regulation, will be aided by the use of the CaFE reporter. Additionally, the CaFE reporter persists into embryogenesis and displays single-cell calcium transients. This embryonic calcium signaling was also reported within the first 24 hours of zebrafish development27. The role of the calcium transients is unknown, but the presence suggests a cell signaling event during development that has not yet been explored. Notably, the calcium transients were not observed in newly fertilized zygotes. Therefore, calcium does not localize to the cleavage furrow as has been documented in several other organisms, including Xenopus and humans20,21,22.
Importantly, the CaFE reporter is easy enough to be used by undergraduates with minimal training. We have designed and executed a 1-credit CURE (course-based undergraduate research experience) lab for biology students with the strains and protocols described here. Over the course of a semester, the class met once a week for 3 h or twice a week for 1 h 30 min each. Students were given the choice to work by themselves or in groups of 2. Each student/pair selected a different gene to study from a curated list. They performed RNAi against their chosen gene in the EAG28 strain and examined worms for effects on fecundity, fertilization, and/or gonad morphology. Based on their results and their background reading using primary literature, the students developed hypotheses that they could test in subsequent experiments. This iterative design was critical to increasing student engagement28. The students obtained authentic research experience and gained skills in model organisms, genetic screens, and fluorescence microscopy. Given the ease of use of the CaFE reporter, students with no research experience were able to succeed. Afterward, the students overwhelmingly expressed a preference for the CURE format over traditional lab classes, with many students expressing a desire to continue with research. Taken together, these tools and protocols aid in both education and research into early developmental processes.
The authors have nothing to disclose.
KSKG was funded by a grant from the Eunice Kennedy Shriver National Institute of Child Health and Human Development (R15HD111986). Some strains were provided by the CGC, which is funded by the NIH Office of Research Infrastructure Programs (P40 OD4010440). We thank WormBase.
Agar | Fisher Scientific | DF0140-07-4 | 2 kg; Powder dissolves easier than flakes |
Agarose | MidSci | BE-A125 | 500 g |
Alcohol lamp | Fisher Scientific | S13475 | Use with 95% ethanol |
Ammonium chloride (NH4Cl) | Fisher Scientific | AAA1500030 | 250 g |
Ampicillin | Fisher Scientific | BP1760-5 | 5 g |
AMSCO 400 Series Small Steam Sterilizer | Steris Healthcare | N/A | |
Bacto-peptone | Fisher Scientific | BP1420-500 | 500 g |
Bacto-tryptone | Fisher Scientific | DF0123-17-3 | 500 g |
Calcium chloride (CaCl2) | Fisher Scientific | C69-500 | 500 g |
Cholesterol | Thermo Scientific | A11470.18 | 50 g |
Dragonfly 200 spinning disk confocal | Oxford Instruments Andor | N/A | Used with Leica microscope |
Fisherbrand Superfrost Cytogenics Microscope Slides | Fisher Scientific | 22-035-900 | 144 slides per pack |
Flat Nose Pliers, Smooth Jaw | Home Depot | 305530604 | Ensure pliers are smooth jaw |
Isopropyl β- d-1-thiogalactopyranoside (IPTG) | Fisher Scientific | BP1755-10 | 10 g; dioxane-free |
Laboratory tape | Fisher Scientific | 15-901-10R | 0.5 inch tape is used to tape microscope slides |
Levamisole | Fisher Scientific | AC187870100 | 10 g |
Magnesium sulfate (MgSO4) | Fisher Scientific | M63-500 | 500 g |
Microscope cover glass | Fisher Scientific | 12541016 | 1 oz pack |
Nikon ECLIPSE Ti2 laser scanning confocal | Nikon | N/A | |
Nikon NIS Elements software | Nikon | N/A | Confocal |
OP50 Escherichia coli | Caenorhabditis Genetics Center (CGC) | OP50 | |
Platinum Wire | TriTech | PT-9010 | |
Potassium phosphate dibasic (K2HPO4) | Fisher Scientific | P288-500 | 500 g |
Potassium phosphate monobasic (KH2PO4) | Fisher Scientific | AA1159436 | 500 g |
Sodium chloride (NaCl) | Fisher Scientific | S271-500 | 500 g |
Sodium phosphate dibasic heptahydrate (Na2HPO4) | Fisher Scientific | S471-3 | 3 kg |
Stereo microscope | Leica | KL300 LED | |
Sterile Petri dish (35 mm x 10 mm) | CellTreat | 229638 | 960 Petri dishes per case |
Sterile Petri dish (60 mm x 15 mm) | CellTreat | 229665 | 500 Petri dishes per case |
Strain EAG16 spn-4p::jGCaMP7s::pie-1u | Caenorhabditis Genetics Center (CGC) | EAG16 | Created by Kim Guisbert Lab |
Strain EAG25 spn-4p::jGCaMP7s::pie-1u; ujIs113 II. | Caenorhabditis Genetics Center (CGC) | EAG25 | Created by Kim Guisbert Lab |
Strain EAG28 spn-4p::jGCaMP7s::pie-1u; unc-119(ed3) III; ltIs44 V. | Caenorhabditis Genetics Center (CGC) | EAG28 | Created by Kim Guisbert Lab |
Strain JIM113 ujIs113 II [pie-1p::mCherry::H2B::pie-1 3'UTR + nhr-2p::his-24::mCherry::let-858 3'UTR + unc-119(+)] | Caenorhabditis Genetics Center (CGC) | JIM113 | Created by E. Preston – Murray Lab |
Strain OD70 unc-119(ed3) III; ltIs44 V [pie-1p::mCherry::PH(PLC1delta1) + unc-119(+)] | Caenorhabditis Genetics Center (CGC) | OD70 | Created by Audhya/Oegema – Greenstein Lab |
Tritech Worm Pick Handle | TriTech | TWPH1 | |
Yeast extract | IBI Scientific | IB49160 | 500 g |
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