The organoptypic hippocampal slice culture model is an in vitro model used to examine neuronal injury in a variety of paradigms. In this article, we describe the methods for generating slice cultures and quantifying neuronal injury.
Organotypic hippocampal slice culture is an in vitro method to examine mechanisms of neuronal injury in which the basic architecture and composition of the hippocampus is relatively preserved 1. The organotypic culture system allows for the examination of neuronal, astrocytic and microglial effects, but as an ex vivo preparation, does not address effects of blood flow, or recruitment of peripheral inflammatory cells. To that end, this culture method is frequently used to examine excitotoxic and hypoxic injury to pyramidal neurons of the hippocampus, but has also been used to examine the inflammatory response. Herein we describe the methods for generating hippocampal slice cultures from postnatal rodent brain, administering toxic stimuli to induce neuronal injury, and assaying and quantifying hippocampal neuronal death.
1. Preparation
Before starting, assemble the required surgical instruments, dissection and culture media, and 7 day old rat or mouse pups. The protocol is the same for mouse and rat preparations.
(i) Materials and equipment
(ii) Dissection Medium (DM; 1 liter at pH 7.3)
Hank’s Balanced Salt | 1 vial ( 95.2 g/1L) ( Sigma : H2387 ) |
NHCO3 ( 4.2 mM) | 350 mg |
HEPES (10 mM) | 2.83 g |
Glucose ( 33.3 mM) | 6.0 g |
Penicillin/streptomycin (100x) | 10 mL |
BSA (0.3%) | 300 mg |
MgSO4-7H2O | 1.44 g |
(iii) Culture medium (400 mL)
MEM (Invitrogen 11575-032) | 200 mL |
***Hank’s Balance Salt(Invitrogen 24020-117) | 100 mL |
Horse serum (Invitrogen 26050-070) | 100 mL |
HEPES buffer (1 M; Invitrogen 15630-080) | 5 mL |
Penicillin/Streptomycin (100x) | 4 mL |
***Add 12.8 g glucose to 500 mL Hank’s Balance Salt before making culture medium |
(iv) Animals
7 day old rat or mouse postnatal pups, generally one litter per experiment.
2. On the Day of Culture
3. Inducing and Quantifying Hippocampal Neuronal Injury in Slice Culture
4. Representative Results
Figure 1. (A) Time line for generation of hippocampal and subsequent experimental injury and image acquisition. (B) Representative images of hippocampal slices basally (T0), 24 hours following a 1 hour exposure to 10 μM NMDA (T24), and after a further 24h or 10 μM NMDA to obtain maximal neuronal injury (Tmax).
There are two important points to follow to ensure reproducible and consistent results when replicating experiments. First, it is important to let the hippocampal slices age for 12-14 days before experimentation. With slice isolation, there is a significant microglial response, and microglia remain activated for some time, with a return to a resting ramified state occurring by day 10 in vitro 3,6. Secondly, mean PI fluorescence intensity is proportional to the number of injured cells 4. Sequential fluorescence is measured at three time points: (i) at T0, before NMDA or OGD stimulation to measure basal levels of spontaneous neuronal death; (ii) at T24, or 24 hours after stimulation with NMDA or OGD or other stimulus, and (iii) at Tmax, following a final treatment of slices with a 24 hour overnight lethal treatment with 10 μM NMDA which produces the maximal amount of neuronal death. The percent cell death is then calculated using the formula (T24 – T0) / (Tmax-T0). It is critical to normalize each slice to itself using this method because the size of the hippocampus and the glutamate receptor expression and distribution change significantly as one goes from rostral to caudal brain, and a failure to normalize each slice to itself may result in artifactual data.
The authors have nothing to disclose.
Funded by NINDS, American Heart Association, American Federation for Aging Research, March of Dimes