Yeh-Chuin Poh1, Junwei Chen2, Ying Hong2, Haiying Yi2, Shuang Zhang2, Junjian Chen2, Douglas C Wu3, Lili Wang2, Qiong Jia2, Rishi Singh3, Wenting Yao2, Youhua Tan1, Arash Tajik3, Tetsuya S Tanaka4, Ning Wang1. 1. 1] Laboratory for Cell Biomechanics and Regenerative Medicine, Department of Biomedical Engineering, School of Life Science and Technology, Huazhong University of Science and Technology, Wuhan, Hubei 430074, China [2] Department of Mechanical Science and Engineering, College of Engineering, University of Illinois at Urbana-Champaign, Urbana, Illinois 61801, USA. 2. Laboratory for Cell Biomechanics and Regenerative Medicine, Department of Biomedical Engineering, School of Life Science and Technology, Huazhong University of Science and Technology, Wuhan, Hubei 430074, China. 3. Department of Mechanical Science and Engineering, College of Engineering, University of Illinois at Urbana-Champaign, Urbana, Illinois 61801, USA. 4. 1] Department of Chemical and Biomolecular Engineering, University of Notre Dame, Notre Dame, Indiana 46556, USA [2] Department of Biological Science, University of Notre Dame, Notre Dame, Indiana 46556, USA.
Abstract
Mammalian inner cell mass cells undergo lineage-specific differentiation into germ layers of endoderm, mesoderm and ectoderm during gastrulation. It has been a long-standing challenge in developmental biology to replicate these organized germ layer patterns in culture. Here we present a method of generating organized germ layers from a single mouse embryonic stem cell cultured in a soft fibrin matrix. Spatial organization of germ layers is regulated by cortical tension of the colony, matrix dimensionality and softness, and cell-cell adhesion. Remarkably, anchorage of the embryoid colony from the 3D matrix to collagen-1-coated 2D substrates of ~1 kPa results in self-organization of all three germ layers: ectoderm on the outside layer, mesoderm in the middle and endoderm at the centre of the colony, reminiscent of generalized gastrulating chordate embryos. These results suggest that mechanical forces via cell-matrix and cell-cell interactions are crucial in spatial organization of germ layers during mammalian gastrulation. This new in vitro method could be used to gain insights on the mechanisms responsible for the regulation of germ layer formation.
Mammalian inner cell mass cells undergo lineage-specific differentpan class="Disease">iation into germ layers of endoderm, mesoderm and ectoderm during gastrulation. It has been a long-standing challenge in developmental biology to replicate these organized germ layer patterns in culture. Here we present a method of generating organized germ layers from a single mouse embryonic stem cell cultured in a soft fibrin matrix. Spatial organization of germ layers is regulated by cortical tension of the colony, matrix dimensionality and softness, and cell-cell adhesion. Remarkably, anchorage of the embryoid colony from the 3D matrix to collagen-1-coated 2D substrates of ~1 kPa results in self-organization of all three germ layers: ectoderm on the outside layer, mesoderm in the middle and endoderm at the centre of the colony, reminiscent of generalized gastrulating chordate embryos. These results suggest that mechanical forces via cell-matrix and cell-cell interactions are crucial in spatial organization of germ layers during mammalian gastrulation. This new in vitro method could be used to gain insights on the mechanisms responsible for the regulation of germ layer formation.
Appropriate organization of three germ layers—endoderm, mesoderm and
ectoderm—during gastrulation is essential for a developing embryo.
Mechanistic studies on the morphogenesis of embryos in Drosophila, Caenorhabditis
elegans, zebrafish and Xenopus have suggested important roles of mechanical
forces in embryonic organization12345. However, whether these
embryos are similar to or different from those mammalian embryos remains unclear,
because the study of mammalian embryo organization remains challenging due to the
inaccessibility of in vivo embryos and lack of appropriate in vitro
models. Embryoid bodies (EBs), formed by aggregation of embryonic stem (ES) cells
(derived from inner cell mass cells of the blastocyst) in suspension, are used as in
vitro models of differentiation67, but it has not been possible
to manipulate generation of organized germ layers in EBs. A recent report shows that
mouseES cell aggregates can be induced to form polarized rosettes in vitro,
followed by luminogenesis, similar to a developing embryo in vivo8. However, evidence for in vitro self-organization of three germ layers with
correct positioning is still lacking.Here we present a novel method of genepan class="Species">rating embryoid colonies with organized germ layers
from a single ES cell and show the factors controlling the germ layer organization. The
endoderm, mesoderm and ectoderm layers are positioned at the inner, middle and outer
layer of the growing colony, reminiscent of the layering of a generalized chordate
gastrulating embryo. The layering of tissues as they express gastrulation markers can be
inverted depending upon culture conditions.
Results
Generation of organized germ layers
To dynamically monitor the status of pluripotency or mesodermal lineage
differentpan class="Disease">iation of a single cell, we developed a mouseES cell line (namely
OGTR1) that stably expresses green fluorescent protein (GFP) driven by the
Oct4
(Pou5f1)
promoter and red fluorescent protein (DsRed) driven by the Brachyury (T) promoter. To provide an
appropriate mechanical and chemical niche to an ES cell, we plated the single
OGTR1 ES cell within a soft fibrin gel9 of 90-Pa (Fig. 1a), which is ~4-fold softer than the mouseES
cell10. In the presence of the self-renewal
factor—Leukaemia Inhibitory
Factor (LIF)11—the ES cell grew into a
large round colony of >1,000 cells within 5 days at a doubling rate of
~11 h (ref. 10). The colony
expressed a high level of Oct4
and no Brachyury, suggesting
that these cells maintained pluripotency and self-renewing capacity (Fig. 1a; Supplementary Fig. 1). Interestingly, we did not observe
heterogeneous expression of DsRed driven by the Brachyury promoter12. This
observation was validated by RT–PCR (Supplementary Fig. 2), consistent with
previously published results13. In contrast, when plated in the
absence of LIF for 5 days, a
single OGTR1 ES cell divided and started to differentiate after
~48 h (Supplementary Fig. 1), and grew into a colony of three distinct
layers: a Gata6-positive layer
indicative of endoderm at the inner layer, a Sox1-positive layer indicative of ectoderm at the middle
layer and a DsRed (Brachyury)-positive layer indicative of mesoderm at the outer
layer (Fig. 1b,c). The differentiation of the ES cells
without LIF in the matrix was
confirmed by RT–PCR as the expression of other lineage-specific genes
was quantified (Supplementary Fig.
2). Real-time qRT–PCR analysis of position-specific germ
layer markers further verified that the observed ectoderm (Fgf5, Otx2, Sox1 and Pax6), mesoderm
(Hand1,
Brachyury,
Twist2,
FoxA2 and
Mixl1) and
endoderm (Gata4,
Gata6 and
Sox17) are
truly bona fide (Figs 2, 3,
4; Supplementary Fig. 3). In comparison, using a conventional hanging
drop assay to generate EBs, ES cells failed to form distinct patterns of germ
layers (Supplementary Fig. 4),
consistent with published results6714. Plating a single ES
cell on top of a 2D fibrin gel of 90-Pa resulted in both Gata6- and Sox1-positive layers appearing
throughout the depth of the colony (Supplementary Fig. 5), suggesting that a single ES cell plated in a
very soft 3D niche grew more efficiently into self-organized germ layers than ES
cells plated on a 2D substrate of the same softness. To assess the roles of
cell–cell and cell–matrix interactions in germ layer
organization, we disrupted cell–matrix interaction and
cell–cell interaction. Blocking cell–fibrin interactions
with the αvβ3 antagonist resulted in a
dose-dependent appearance of the Gata6-positive layer at the outer layer, with little change
to the position of either the Brachyury- or Sox1-positive layer (Fig. 1d; Supplementary Fig. 6), suggesting
that engaging fibrin via αvβ3 integrin
and the subsequent tension generation (Fig. 6) may be
important for the correct positioning of the endoderm layer. Blocking
inter-E-cadherin adhesion
with anti-E-cadherin
antibodies (Fig. 1e) or addition of EGTA to disrupt calcium-sensitive,
cadherin-mediated cell–cell adhesion (Supplementary Fig. 7) completely abrogated
the organization of the germ layers, consistent with reports that
cell–cell interactions are crucial in early embryogenesis1516171819202122. Although the underlying molecular
mechanism for controlling the organization of each germ layer remains unknown
(see our discussion below), these results are consistent with a recent finding
that cell–cell interaction is important in stem cell
differentiation23 and myosin-IIA-mediated tension in the growing mouse embryoid
colony is important in the appropriate positioning and organization of germ
layers22.
Figure 1
Soft fibrin gels promote organization of germ layers.
(a) Representative bright-field (top) and fluorescence (middle and
bottom) images of a single ESC cultured in soft 3D fibrin gels in the
presence of LIF
(0 h) that formed a round spherical colony in 5 days
(120 h). Strong EGFP fluorescence was observed (middle,
‘Oct4’), whereas no DsRed fluorescence was
observed (bottom, ‘Brachyury’). (b) Representative images
of a single ESC cultured in soft fibrin gels without LIF (0 h, the
bright-field image is on the top and the fluorescence images on the middle
and bottom, left column) that formed a colony with organized germ layers in
5 days (middle and left columns). Middle: bright-field images of colonies
grown from three single cells; right: the presence of endo- and ectodermal
cells was detected by immunofluorescence microscopy using anti-Gata6 and Sox1 antibodies, respectively,
whereas DsRed fluorescence indicated the differentiation of mesodermal cells
(Brachyury). Lines
were used to acquire the fluorescence intensity data shown in (c).
(c) Quantification of germ layer organization along with 0 (at
the centre core) and 1 (at the colony boundary) arbitrary unit (a.u.) based
on lines drawn on the fluorescence images on the left in (b).
Mean±s.e.m. (d) Representative bright field (left) and
fluorescence (middle) images and quantification of different germ layer
markers (Sox1,
Gata6 and
Brachyury) 5 days
after αvβ3 antagonist treatment (right). Single ES cells
were treated with
20 μg ml−1 of
αvβ3 antagonist for 5 days in −LIF medium. Note that the endoderm
layer was located at the outer periphery of the colony. Mean±s.e.m.
(e) Representative bright-field (left) and fluorescence (middle)
images in –LIF
condition 5 days after anti-E-cadherin antibody
(2 μg ml−1
final concentration) treatment to block E-cadherin–E-cadherin adhesion. Germ layer
organization was completely blocked. Quantification of different germ layer
markers is shown on the right. Mean±s.e.m.; similar biological
replicates of immunofluorescence staining were obtained from at least three
independent experiments for each subfigure. W4 cells were used in all
figures except for a and the mesoderm layer in b where OGTR1
cells were used. Scale bars, 50 μm.
Figure 2
Real-time qRT–PCR of different germ layers.
Differentiated colonies from soft fibrin gels were extracted and cells of
each germ layer were isolated using FACS sorting. (a) Mesoderm cells
are compared with ectoderm cells. Expression of mesoderm markers:
Hand1,
Brachyury,
Twist2,
FoxA2 and
Mixl1 were
higher (P<0.007, P<0.002, P<0.003,
P<0.026 and P<0.012). Ectoderm markers such
as Fgf5,
Otx2,
Sox1 and
Pax6 were
significantly lower (P<0.041, P<0.001,
P<0.003 and P<0.012). Mesoderm cells express
high levels of α5, αv, and
β3
integrin (P<0.002, P<0.008
and P<0.039). No significant difference was observed for
α2
integrin (P=0.31) and Wnt3 expression
(P=0.62). Mean±s.e.m. n=3 independent experiments.
(b) Endoderm cells are compared with ectoderm cells. Endoderm
markers such as Gata4, Gata6 and Sox17 were highly expressed
(P<0.010, P<0.031 and P<0.003),
whereas ectoderm markers Fgf5, Otx2, Sox1 and Pax6 were significantly lower
(P<0.001, P<0.001, P<0.044 and
P<0.001). Endoderm cells express high levels of
α5
integrin (P<0.008). No significant
difference was observed for αv integrin (P=0.21),
β3
integrin (P=0.38) and Wnt3 expression
(P=0.19). These data suggest that ectoderm cells not only express
high levels of α1β1 integrin but
also high levels of E-cadherin. Mean±s.e.m.; n=3 independent
experiments.
Figure 3
Ectoderm and endoderm cells induced by exogenous chemical factors.
(a) ESCs were differentiated with ActivinA
(100 ng ml−1) or with
retinoic acid
(5 μM). Cells were then immunofluorescently labelled
and the percentage of the stained cells was quantified using a
haemocytometer. About 83% of the cells treated with ActivinA were Gata6–labelled,
whereas ~90% of the cells treated with retinoic acid were Sox1-labelled; n=6
separate counts for each marker. (b) Representative phase contrast
(left column), Gata6
(middle column) and Sox1
immunofluorescence images (right column) of endoderm (top row) and ectoderm
(bottom row) cells. ESCs that were differentiated by ActivinA or by retinoic acid were each stained for
Sox1 and
Gata6.
ActivinA-treated
cells are stained only by Gata6 (endoderm marker), whereas retinoic acid-treated cells are
stained only by Sox1 (ectoderm marker). Real-time
qRT–PCRs of these chemically differentiated cells are shown in
Fig. 4. Scale bars,
50 μm.
Figure 4
Real-time qRT–PCR of different germ layers induced by exogenous
chemical factors.
Chemically differentiated ectoderm and endoderm cells were analysed to verify
whether they are bona fide. (a) Mesoderm cells are compared
with ectoderm cells. Expression of mesoderm markers: Hand1, Brachyury, Twist2, FoxA2 and Mixl1 were higher
(P<0.04, P<0.004, P<0.006,
P<0.007 and P<0.02). Ectoderm markers such
as Fgf5,
Otx2,
Sox1 and
Pax6 were
significantly lower (P<0.006, P<0.03,
P<0.001 and P<0.001). Mesoderm cells express
high levels of α5, αv and β3 integrin
(P<0.015, P<0.008 and P<0.041). No
significant difference was observed for α2 integrin (P=0.61) and
Wnt3 expression (P=0.35). Mean±s.e.m. n=3 independent
experiments. (b) Endoderm cells are compared with ectoderm cells.
Endoderm markers such as Gata4, Gata6 and Sox17 were highly expressed
(P<0.003, P<0.004 and P<0.01),
whereas ectoderm markers Fgf5, Otx2 and Sox1 were significantly lower
(P<0.001, P<0.001 and P<0.001).
Endoderm cells express high levels of α5 and αv integrin
(P<0.047, P<0.002). No significant
difference was observed for Pax6 (P=0.38), α2 integrin
(P=0.21), β3 integrin (P=0.1) and
Wnt3 expression (P=0.48). These verify that ectoderm cells express
high levels of E-cadherin
and α1β1 collagen-1 binding
integrin. Mean±s.e.m.; n=3 independent experiments.
Figure 6
Colony tension impacts germ layer organization.
(a) Left: bright-field images of the colonies; middle: F-actin
staining of the colony in the left; right: magnified areas of the boxes in
the middle, showing much more F-actin in +LIF condition than in
–LIF
condition. (b) Representative bright-field (top) and fluorescence
(bottom) images of individual cells (isolated from colonies maintained under
conditions indicated on the top) on 2D rigid substrates. (c) Colony
stiffness was measured after 5 days of culture for each isolated intact
colony. Mean±−s.e.m.; n=84 for +LIF; n=80 for
–LIF.
(d) Individual cell stiffness. Individual cells were re-plated on
2D rigid substrate for 6 h before stiffness measurements were
carried out. Mean±s.e.m.; n=28 for 2D rigid dish
+LIF; n=53 for
3D fibrin +LIF;
n=27 for 3D fibrin –LIF. (e) Representative bright field (left) and
fluorescence (middle) images of the colonies treated with ROCK inhibitor
Y27632
(25 μM) for 5 days (note that germ layers became
disorganized and colonies exhibited extensive dendritic morphology);
quantification of different germ layer markers is shown on the right.
Mean±s.e.m. Similar results of immunofluorescence staining were
obtained from at least three independent experiments for each subfigure.
Scale bar, 50 μm. (*, P<0.023). OGTR1
cells were used in all subfigures except in a and e where W4
cells were used.
Dependence of embryoid colony growth on matrix softness
To further explore what dictates the growth pan class="Species">rate of a single ES cell, we plated
the cells within 3D fibrin matrices of varying softness. Five days after a
single cell was plated, the resulting colony was much larger in the 90-Pa gel
than the ones grown in the 420 or 1,050-Pa gel, in both the presence and absence
of LIF (Fig.
5a,b,e). The proliferation rate of ES cells on 2D matrix was similar
to those in 3D 90-Pa soft fibrin gels regardless of the 2D matrices stiffness,
but the proliferation rate of cells in 3D fibrin gels decreased as matrix
stiffness increased (Supplementary Fig.
8), suggesting that a stiffer 3D matrix may pose a stronger physical
barrier for the colony to increase its size as the cells divide. Interestingly,
while colonies in all three matrices were spherical in the presence of
LIF (Fig.
5c), the colonies in the 90-Pa matrix without LIF decreased their roundness much more
significantly than those in 420 or 1,050-Pa matrix (Fig.
5a(insets)), suggesting that it is easier for the cells to move
outward in the softest gel. The cells in the 90-Pa gel also increased DsRed
expression slightly more than those in stiffer gels (Fig.
5g), whereas EGFP levels were similar (Fig.
5d). It is important to note that elevating the fibrin gel stiffness from
90 to 1,050 Pa was achieved by an increase in fibrin concentration
from 1 to 8 mg ml−1 and thus a
decrease in gel porosity. Hence it was difficult to discern whether it was the
elasticity or the porosity of the gel that dictates the circularity of the
colony. However, when a single ES cell was plated in the 3D fibrin gel of 90-Pa
near the bottom of the plastic dish (~2 μm above
it), it grew into a spread colony in the presence of LIF (Supplementary Fig. 9). Since the porosity of
the gel was the same for all cells in the gel, the cells near the bottom must
have felt the stiffness of the rigid dish, consistent with the published
reports2425. These data suggest that it is the matrix
stiffness, but not the matrix porosity, that dictates the spreading propensity
of the ES cell.
Figure 5
Matrix softness influences ES cell growth and differentiation.
(a) Bright-field images of mESC colonies after 5 days of culture
(grown from a single ESC) in 3D fibrin gels of different stiffness. Insets
are magnified colony peripheries showing the surface roughness. Scale bar,
50 μm. (b) Summarized results of colony sizes in
the presence of LIF
(+LIF). (c)
Circularity index in +LIF
conditions. The circularity index is a measure of the roundedness of a
colony. (d) Normalized EGFP intensity as a function of culture time
in the absence of LIF
(–LIF).
(e) Projected areas as a function of culture time. (f)
Circularity index in –LIF conditions. (g) Normalized DsRed intensity in
–LIF
conditions. Mean±s.e.m.; n=15 colonies for each condition in
b–g. Data pooled from >3 independent
experiments. OGTR1 cells were used to obtain the results of all figures.
Colony tension impacts germ layer organization
To explore the potential role of tension in germ layer organization, we
quantified stiffness of a whole-mouseES cell colony isolated from the 3D fibrin
gel matrix. Colonies cultured with LIF were stiffer than those without LIF (Fig. 6c), and
colonies cultured with LIF had
F-actins more concentrated at the periphery compared with those without
LIF (Fig.
6a). In contrast, opposite to the whole colony’s
mechanical property, single cells isolated from the colony were stiffer and more
spread in the absence of LIF
than those with LIF (Fig. 6b,d). This suggests that differentiation due to the
absence of LIF stiffens single
ES cells but not the whole colony, which was prevented from stiffening by the
soft matrix. The stiffness of differentiated embryoid colonies at day 5 was
similar to the values (~0.4 kPa) of embryonic discs26. Reduction of endogenous tension either with the addition of a
Rho-associated kinase (ROCK) inhibitor or after addition of myosin-II inhibitor
blebbistatin completely
disrupted the proper organization of the germ layers, generating elongated cell
protrusions with misaligned germ layers (Fig. 6e; Supplementary Fig. 10). siRNA
knockdown of Myosin II-A and
Myosin II-B also disrupted
proper organization of germ layers (Supplementary Fig. 11). In addition, downregulation of cellular
tension with Blebistatin or with Y-27632 in +LIF conditions for 5 days resulted in loss of spherical
morphology in the colonies but no differentiation or Brachyury-positive cells were observed
(Supplementary Fig. 12),
suggesting that tension downregulation can influence colony morphology
independent of differentiation by LIF. In contrast, when a constitutively active mutant of
RhoA (RhoA-V14)27 was
transfected into the cells in +LIF condition, colonies remained spherical and pluripotent,
whereas RhoA-V14-transfected
colonies in the –LIF condition started to spread and positioned Brachyury-positive cells at the outer
layer (Supplementary Fig. 12).
Taken together, these data suggest that the cytoskeletal tension in the actin
filaments in the growing mouse embryoid colony may be important in the
appropriate positioning and organization of the germ layers, consistent with
published reports in lower animals28293031.
Correct positioning of three germ layers
At the very early developmental stage of mouse preimplantation embryos, the
ball-shaped embryo grows and develops as it movpan class="Chemical">es towards the uterus3233. The cells of the epiblast begin to differentiate into three
germ layers around embryonic-day 6 after its implantation into the uterine
wall34, which consists mainly of type-1 collagen
(collagen-1)35. We cultured single mouseES cells in soft 3D
fibrin gels in +LIF condition;
then, we withdrew LIF after
11 h. At day 2.5 (after 60 h of culture in the 3D fibrin
gel), the fibrin gels were gently dissolved. The intact individual colonies were
isolated by mild centrifugation (56 g for 2 min) and
transferred to the top of collagen-1-coated polyacrylamide (PA) gels of
1 kPa in –LIF conditions to mimic the signals during the implantation
process (Fig. 7a). Remarkably, DsRed-positive cells formed
a middle ring at day 5, two and a half days after adhesion on 2D
collagen-1-coated substrates in –LIF conditions (Figs 7b and 8; Supplementary
Movie 2). Colonies transferred to 2D substrates of higher stiffness
(3.5 or 8 kPa) gave rise to (non-spherical) spread colonies without a
proper DsRed-positive layer (Fig. 7b). No in vivo
data are available on the local stiffness of the endometrial epithelium when the
embryo implants. However, in vitro data suggest that epithelial cells in
general have a stiffness of ~1–5 kPa (ref.
36). Thus, our finding that a DsRed-positive
layer formed in the middle of the colony after the colony was seeded on a 1-kPa
substrate is consistent with the known stiffness range. Remarkably,
immunostaining of colonies on 1-kPa gels showed a unique spherical morphology
with self-organized germ layers reminiscent of generalized chordate gastrulae
(ectoderm on the outside and endoderm at the inner most centre of the colony,
with mesoderm in the middle) (Figs 7c,d, 8 and 9; Supplementary Movies 1–3). In
sharp contrast, colonies that were kept in the 3D fibrin matrix throughout the
5-day period (Fig. 1b,c) exhibited flipped mesoderm and
ectoderm layers at day 5: endoderm at the inside, ectoderm in the middle and
mesoderm at the outside. Interaction of the colony with collagen-1
(α1/α2β1
integrins engage collagen-1; ref. 37) was found to
be necessary for the formation of the proper germ layer organization as the
transfer from 3D matrices to 2D surfaces with adhesion on other extracellular
matrix proteins such as fibronectin (which engage
α5β1 and
αvβ3 integrins38)
did not yield distinct organization of all three germ layers (Supplementary Fig. 13). Consistent with the
notion that normal morphogenesis of the inner cell mass is dependent on
β1
integrin3940, but not on β3 integrin4142, our results indicate that only
α1β1 and/or
α2β1 integrins give rise to proper
germ layer organization in our in vitro system. Reduction in colony
attachment to collagen-1 resulted in no germ layer organization when the
colonies were incubated in a medium containing anti-collagen 1 antibodies during
transfer (Supplementary Fig. 14),
supporting the notion that the colony attachment to collagen-1 is specific.
Studies have shown that the adherence of embryos with intact trophoblasts is
significantly lower on laminin or fibronectin surface as compared with on collagen-1
substrates43. Furthermore, collagen-1 and β1 integrin are
highly expressed in EBs under hanging drop cultures44. Although
no distinct organization of three germ layers was observed when colonies were
transferred onto fibronectin-coated substrates, segregation of different cell
types was observed (Supplementary Fig.
13), consistent with the notion that fibronectin is necessary for the
directed migration of mesodermal cells45. Taken together, these
results indicate that local matrix dimensionality and colony–matrix
interaction are critical to the proper organization of three germ layers,
extending previous findings in lower animals that cell–cell tension
plays important roles15. At present, the efficiency of generating
each germ layer varied with this method. Proper organization of endoderm and
mesoderm layers was simultaneously generated at relatively high efficiency
(~50%, that is, ~50 out of every 100 transferred colonies
had both layers in the correct position) and ~5% of the colonies
(~5 out of every 100 transferred colonies) were found to be
Sox1-positive cells that
formed a ring-like layer at the periphery. Therefore, the success rate of
generating correct positioning for all three germ layers was ~2.5%.
Further refinement of this approach is needed to increase the efficiency of
proper ectoderm generation.
Figure 7
Generation of three germ layer organization.
(a) Schematic of the experimental protocol. A single OGTR1 ESC was
grown in 3D 90-Pa fibrin gel in the presence of LIF (+LIF) for the first 11 h
before switching to –LIF condition. At day 2.5, the individual colony is
transferred to the top of collagen-1 (Col-1)-coated polyacrylamide gel (PA)
of 1-kPa stiffness in the absence of LIF (−LIF). (b) Bright-field (left column) and
fluorescence (second, third and right columns) images of ESC colonies
maintained under conditions indicated on the left show positioning of a
mesoderm layer (a DsRed-Brachyury expressing, donut-like ring) in the middle of
the colony on top of Col-1-coated PA gels. Note that only on 1-kPa PA gels,
the colony generated a mesodermal layer in the middle of the colony; spread
colonies with randomly positioned mesodermal cells were found on stiffer
substrates. EGFP is still expressed in the colony, suggesting that at this
stage the colony is in transition between pluripotency and multipotency.
(c) Representative bright-field (left) and fluorescence (right)
images of colonies at day 5, after being transferred from 3D fibrin to 2D
collagen-1 PA as described in (a). Endo- and ectodermal cells were
stained by immunofluorescence microscopy using anti-Gata6 and Sox1 antibodies, respectively,
whereas DsRed fluorescence indicated the differentiation of mesodermal cells
(Brachyury). Lines
were used to acquire the fluorescence intensity data shown in (d).
(d) Quantification of germ cell organization as described in
Fig. 1c. Self-organized germ layers were properly
replicated with endoderm at the core, mesoderm in the middle and ectoderm at
the periphery. Mean±s.e.m.; at least three independent experiments
showing similar results. Scale bar, 50 μm. The
efficiency of Gata6-positive (endoderm) cells exclusively in the inner
layer and the efficiency of Brachyury-positive (mesoderm) cells exclusively in the
middle layer of the embryoid colony are ~50% (50 out of every 100
transferred colonies; >500 colonies quantified). The efficiency of
Sox1-positive
(ectoderm) cells exclusively in the outer layer of the embryoid colony is
~5% (5 out of every 100 colonies; >300 colonies were
quantified). The efficiency of generating all three germ layers in the
correct positioning is 2.6±0.28% (mean±s.e.m.; from nine
separate experiments). In contrast, no proper positioning of any type of
germ layer cells was found (0 out of 1,000 colonies) in the embryoid
colonies when they were transferred to fibronectin-coated 2D PA substrates of 1 kPa
(Supplementary Fig. 13).
OGTR1 cells were used in all subfigures except the staining of endoderm and
ectoderm in (c).
Figure 8
Time course of formation of Brachyury-positive mesodermal middle layer.
As described in Fig. 7a, A single OGTR1 ESC was grown
in 3D 90-Pa fibrin gel in +LIF condition for the first 11 h before
switching to –LIF condition. After 60 h, the individual
colony is transferred to the top of collagen-1-coated polyacrylamide gel in
the absence of LIF. The
Brachyury-positive
cells were observed to localize or segregate at one end of the colony before
sorting into a distinct middle mesodermal layer after 84 h. About
50% of the cells (out of 50 single ESCs) from >3 separate experiments
that were tracked from time zero to 120 h showed similar results.
Scale bar, 50 μm.
Figure 9
Confocal images of ectoderm and mesoderm germ layers within the same
colony.
Representative images of two different colonies with bright field (left
column), a distinct Pax6
ectoderm immunofluorescence at the outer layer (2nd column), a distinct
Brachyury mesoderm
immunofluorescence at the middle layer (3nd column) and merge fluorescence
images (right column). Scale bar, 50 μm. From these
staining data and those staining data of the colonies in the movies,
assuming individual cells from each germ layer have the same volume, we
estimate that endoderm, mesoderm and ectoderm layer cells are
~5%, 60% and 35% of the total cells, respectively. These results
are representatives of >3 experimental replicates.
Time course of the Brachyury
gene expression shows that Brachyury-positive cells localize at one end of the embryoid
colony before sorting into a middle mesodermal layer (Fig.
8). When these embryoid colonies on 2D collagen-1 substrates were
then encapsulated in 3D fibrin gels, the Brachyury-positive mesoderm cells distributed outwards to
the outer layer (Fig. 10b). Conversely, late-stage
embryoid colonies that formed the outer mesoderm layer in the 3D fibrin gels
distributed toward the middle layer when they were transferred onto 2D
collagen-1 substrates (Fig. 10a), suggesting that
self-organization of embryoid colony is due to differential adhesion of cells
from different germ layers since in the 3D fibrin gels the outer layer cells
engage αvβ3 integrin, whereas on the
2D gels the outer layer cells engage
α1β1 integrins. Immunofluorescence
staining of β1
integrin (Supplementary Fig. 15) and qRT–PCR results (Figs 2 and 4) show that ectoderm cells
expressed higher levels of α1β1
integrin that preferentially binds to collagen-1 than the other two germ layer
cells. These results suggest that differential integrin expression and
engagement influence germ layer organization.
Figure 10
Self-organization of the embryoid colony is due to differential adhesion of
germ layer cells.
(a) A single ESC was cultured in 3D soft fibrin gels in the absence of
LIF. When
Brachyury-positive
cells were distinctly observed at the outer layer at 4.5 days, the gel was
dissolved and colonies transferred to 2D collagen-1-coated PA gel. The
Brachyury-positive
outer layer was observed to move inwards to the middle layer by day 6.
(b) As described in Fig. 7a, ESCs were
first cultured in 3D soft fibrin gels before being transferred to 2D
collagen-1-coated PA gel after 60 h. At day 4.5 when
Brachyury-positive
cells were distinctly expressed at the middle layer, the colonies were
encapsulated with 3D soft fibrin gel. The Brachyury-positive middle layer was
observed to move outwards to the outer layer by day 6. These results suggest
that the colony self-organizes on the basis of preferential binding of
mesodermal cells to fibrin and ectodermal cells to collagen-1. Scale bar,
50 μm. These results are representative of >3
experimental replicates.
While colony–matrix interaction plays a role in germ layer
positioning, stimulation of signalling pathways by soluble factors is well known
to be important in differentiation and development of embryos. Wnt signalling
components have been reported to be pan class="Chemical">essential for the establishment of primitive
streak and mesoderm formation4647. In our EBs, expression of
Wnt3a and Bmp4 were detected a day before
Brachyury appearance and
both were found to form similar polar ends before dispersing throughout the
whole colony (Supplementary Fig.
16). Since Wnt signalling mediates the anterior–posterior
polarity and axis formation in EBs14, we explored the role of
Wnt, Bmp4 and nodal in the organization of different
germ layers. Without exogenous signals, cells cultured in 3D soft fibrin gels
for 5 days formed mesoderm cells at the outer layer. However, low concentrations
of Wnt3a, Bmp4 or ActivinA (which activates the
nodal pathway48) all resulted in formation of middle layer Brachyury-positive mesoderm cells (Supplementary Fig. 17).
Supplementing the medium with Dkk1 (a Wnt antagonist) caused the mesoderm cells to form
the inner layer in the case of Wnt3a and ActivinA, but not Bmp4 (Supplementary
Fig. 17). Interestingly, Bmp antagonist Noggin along with the activation of Wnt,
Bmp and nodal caused the cells
with Brachyury expression to
form the outer layer. Suppressing Bmp alone without the activation of other
signals caused the cells to undergo apoptosis (Supplementary Fig. 17). Together with the
time course results of Brachyury expression (Fig. 8), we
conclude that Wnt signalling is essential in early formation of
anterior–posterior polarity, and continuous activation or inhibition
of Wnt, Bmp4 or nodal signals for 5 days gives rise to a
shift in germ layer position (Supplementary Fig. 17). The organization of germ layers observed at
day 5 in this study is of a relatively late-stage in embryogenesis, after the
establishment of primitive streak and anterior–posterior
polarity14. Although we do not know at the present time the
underlying mechanism for controlling the organization of the germ layers when
the Wnt signalling pathway is modulated, together with our findings that colony
tension impacts germ layer organization, differentiation-related processes
and/or molecules in germ layer organization such as Wnt3, Bmp4 and nodal as well as tension may play
crucial roles in the formation of organized germ layers.
When ES cells were cultured in soft 3D fibrin gels under
–pan class="Gene">LIF conditions
throughout the first day of the culture (day 0) and transferred to 2D
collagen-1-coated PA substrates at day 2.5, they did not maintain their
spherical shape. Rather, the colony spread out and formed a monolayer of cells
within a day of adhesion to the 2D substrate (Supplementary Fig. 18). These results suggest
that the timing of withdrawing the soluble self-renewal factor LIF as well as appropriate substrate
stiffness, matrix dimensionality and colony–matrix mechanical tension
are critical to the generation of self-organized germ layers in this in
vitro embryo model.
Discussion
Taken together, our results show that the development of the OGTR1 pan class="Species">mouse ES cell line
and the culture of ESCs in soft 3D fibrin gels provide a useful platform for further
studies on the formation of organized germ layers. The present study demonstrates
that a spherical colony with proper germ layer arrangement of endoderm, mesoderm and
ectoderm from the inner layer to the outer layer can be generated from a single
mammalianESC by controlling colony tension and anchorage-dependent
cell–matrix interaction. A report of an in vitro assay reveals
that the frequency of development of early mouse embryos on 1-kPa collagen-1 gels is
greater than that on rigid substrates of 1 GPa (ref. 49), suggesting that our assay using collagen-1-coated 1-kPa gels
might be useful and relevant. This method could provide an in vitro model for
exploring mechanisms of tissue morphogenesis during mammalian germ layer formation.
The outer and the inner layers of gastrulating mouse embryos at E6.5–8.0
differentiate into the visceral endoderm and the embryonic ectoderm,
respectively50. With regard to the spatial organization of three
germ layers, the embryoid colony is similar to the mouse embryo at E9.0 after a
process of rotation that results in the endoderm locating at the inner layer and the
ectoderm locating at the outer layer. However, the cells in the E9.0 mouse embryo
are more specialized than those of the embryoid colony; mouse and human embryos at
the gastrulation stage have the shapes of cylinders and plates, respectively,
different from the spherical shape of the embryoid colony observed in the current
study. Therefore, it will be interesting to see what cell types and shape the
self-organized embryoid colony in long-term cultures (>5 days) will develop
into. A recent report demonstrates that the engagement of β1-integrins with the
extracellular matrix proteins enables self-organization of mouseESCs to form
polarized rosettes that initiate luminogenesis similar to days 2.5–5.0
embryos in vivo8. Consistently, our results demonstrate that
interactions of the embryoid colony with collagen-1 are necessary for the formation
of proper germ layer organization. In addition to the recent findings in the culture
conditions that stimulate implantation and allow ES cells to develop into
epiblast-like structures8, we demonstrate that the culture of ES
cells can be taken further to establish distinct lineages using specific protocols.
Our current approach shows the ability to generate self-organization of three germ
layers in vitro, a stage later than the polarized rosettes. However, the
detailed events and underlying mechanisms leading up to the organized germ layer
patterns remain to be elucidated. Our finding that specific cell–matrix
interaction and matrix dimensionality are crucial in germ layer positioning is
further strengthened by the result that the mesoderm layer distribution is inverted
(from the middle layer to the outer layer) when the colony is transferred from a 2D
collagen-1 surface into a 3D fibrin gel (Fig. 10). Our
observation that blocking matrix (fibrin)–integrin interaction and thus
potentially myosin-II-dependent tensile forces across the integrins results in the
endoderm layer moving from the inner layer to the outer layer (Fig.
1c,d) suggests that the appropriate positioning of the endoderm layer
depends on the tensile forces of the cells. On the other hand, the mesoderm layer
locates from the outer layer (Fig. 1c) to the middle layer
(Fig. 7c,d) when the embryoid colony is transferred from a
3D matrix substrate to a 2D matrix substrate, and the ectoderm layer moves in the
opposite direction (compare Fig. 1c with Fig.
7d), suggesting that asymmetric tensile force distribution and possibly
magnitudes and directions of compressive forces may play critical roles in
mesoderm/ectoderm layer organization, in addition to specific integrin subtypes
(that is, collagen-1 versus fibronectin; see Fig. 7c and Supplementary Fig. 13). A recently developed
novel oil-droplet force transducer system51 might be used to
elucidate these questions and to quantify magnitudes, direction and distribution of
forces surrounding growing embryoid colonies, as increasing in vivo evidence
suggests that contractile acto-myosin networks drive cell shape changes during
morphogenesis52. The position-specific gene expression patterns
from the cells isolated from the embryoid colonies in the 3D fibrin gels are in
general consistent with and similar to those chemically induced (differentiation)
gene patterns, but there are a few quantitative differences in a few genes (for
example, Hand1,
Brachyury,
Twist2,
Gata4,
Gata6 and
Sox17). It will be
interesting to determine what accounts for these quantitative differences. It has
been shown that exogenous biophysical signals can be transmitted through the
cytoskeleton and into the nucleus to dissociate protein–protein complexes
in the Cajal bodies53; however, at present the molecular mechanisms
of how matrix rigidity and dimensionality influence the differentiation of ESCs and
organization patterns of germ layers remain elusive. Published reports show that the
Yes-associated protein
(YAP) and TAZ are important in the
matrix-rigidity-dependent differentiation of mesenchymal stem cells54
and motor neuron differentiation of human pluripotent stem cells55.
It will be interesting to see whether YAP/TAZ
and/or other unknown factors play a role in early embryogenesis and germ layer
organization.
Methods
Creation of OGTR1 mESC cell line
Unless otherwise noted, the rpan class="Chemical">estriction enzymes and DNA-modifying enzymes used in
this study were obtained from New England Biolabs (Ipswich, MA, USA). pGTIV2
(ref. 56) was digested with ClaI and NsiI to remove
an intervening sequence that contains one PvuII site, and ligated with a
ClaI-NsiI linker (Invitrogen, Carlsbad, CA). This modified pGTIV2 was further
digested with NotI and PvuII to obtain a cassette that contains Gtx
motifs57, Venus58 and polyadenylation
signals (referred to as IVpA). The IVpA cassette was ligated into
pBluescriptIIKS(−) sequentially digested with SalI and NotI. Before
NotI digestion, the cohesive ends generated by SalI digestion were blunt-ended
with the Klenow fragment (Invitrogen). The resulting vector was named pBS_IVpA.
After a unique EcoRI site was introduced at an XbaI site in pBS_IVpA by a linker
(Invitrogen), Venus in pBS_IVpA was removed by digestion with NcoI and
EcoRI, and replaced with modified Venus that lacks a stop codon (TAA). This
modification of Venus was carried out by PCR with Phusion DNA polymerase and the
following primers: forward 5′-ATGATATCGCCACCATGGTGAGCA-3′;
reverse 5′-TCGAATCTGTACAGCTCGTCC-3′ (ref. 59). The resulting pBS_IVpA with modified Venus
was digested with EcoRI and XbaI to clone the puromycin-resistant gene
(Puro) with the self-cleaving peptide T2A60 at the 5′ end of Puro,
which was obtained from pCAG_T2APuro59. The resulting vector,
namely pBS_IV2AP, was digested with NotI and ClaI and subsequently ligated with
self-annealed oligonucleotides that encode restriction enzyme sites of NotI,
EcoRV, PmeI, AflII, PacI, NheI and HpaI (sense:
5′-GGCCGCGATATCGTTTAAACTTAAGTTAATTAAGCTAGCGTTAAC-3′;
antisense
5′-CGGTTAACGCTAGCTTAATTAACTTAAGTTTAAACGATATCGC-3′;
Integrated DNA Technologies (IDT), Coralville, IA, USA). This linker contains a
NotI site at the 5′ end and a compatible but mutated ClaI site at the
3′ end. The resulting vector was designated pBS_MCSIV2AP. Then,
Venus in pBS_MCSIV2AP was removed by digestion with NcoI and EcoRI
and replaced with DsRedT3 (ref. 61) obtained
from pCAG_DsRedT2AP (refs 59, 62). The resulting vector was named pBS_MCSIR2AP. An XhoI site
was introduced at the NotI site in pBS_MCSIR2AP by a linker (IDT). The resulting
vector was designated pBS_MCSIR2APx.
To build a drug resistance cassette, the PGK promoter and the
pan class="Chemical">blasticidin-resistant gene (Bsd) were obtained
from pGTLox4 (kindly provided by Dr William L. Stanford, University of Ottawa,
Ottawa, Canada) that was digested with EcoRI and ScaI, and subcloned into EcoRI
and SmaI-digested pBluescriptIIKS(−) that has polyadenylation signals
cloned at the XbaI site. The resulting vector, namely pPGKBsrpA, was digested
with XhoI and ligated with an XhoI-digested cassette obtained from pBS_MCSIR2APx
that harbours multiple cloning sites, Gtx motifs, DsRedT3 linked
with Puro
viaT2A and polyadenylation signals. The final vector, referred to as
pMCSIRPPB, has unique AflII, ApaI, HpaI, KpnI and NheI sites to clone a
gene-specific promoter.
The gene regulatory sequence of the T gene was amplified by PCR using a BAC
(RP23-444I17, BACpan class="Chemical">PAC Resources Center, Children’s Hospital Oakland
Research Institute, CA, USA) as a template and the following primers:
EcoRV-pT-F, 5′-AAGATATCTCCCTCTCAGGTGCGCGCAG-3′; NheI-pT-R,
5′-TTGCTAGCCTCCCGCCACCCTCTC-3′ (IDT). These primers were
designed to amplify a genomic region between −529 and +152 relative
to the transcriptional initiation site, which regulates T expression in the
streak-derived mesoderm but not in the axial mesoderm63. The PCR
product digested with EcoRV and NheI was cloned into pMCSIRPPB sequentially
digested with KpnI and NheI. Before NheI digestion, cohesive ends of pMCSIRPPB
generated by KpnI digestion were blunt-ended by T4 DNA polymerase. Cloned DNA
sequence identity was verified by sequencing.
The purified resulting vector, namely pan class="Chemical">pTIRPPB, was transfected to mouseES cells
that express EGFP under the Oct3/4 promoter (OGR1)1259626465 by FuGene HD (Roche Applied Science,
Indianapolis, IN, USA) essentially as previously described59.
Blasticidin-resistant clones, namely OGTR1, were isolated and expanded for
analysis. Stochastic expression of DsRedT3 was observed in OGTR1 cultured as
undifferentiated1166.
mESC culture
A wild-type mESC line (pan class="CellLine">W4, 129S6/SvEvTac) was cultured and used as described62. These cells were further used to grow single individual cells
into colonies and immunostained for endoderm, mesoderm or ectoderm germ layers.
In addition, the OGTR1 mESC line described above was used in this study. These
undifferentiated mESCs were cultured and maintained in the medium consisting of
high glucose-Dulbecco’s Modified Eagles Medium
(Invitrogen) supplemented with 15% ES-qualified fetal bovine serum (Invitrogen),
2 mM L-glutamine
(Invitrogen), 1 mM sodium
pyruvate, 0.1 mM nonessential amino acids
(Invitrogen), 1% penicillin–streptomycin, 0.1 mM beta-mercaptoethanol (Sigma) and
1,000 U ml−1 recombinant
LIF (ESGRO; Millipore) at
37°C in 5% CO2. Cells were passaged every 2–3
days at a ratio of 1:6 using TrypLE (Invitrogen). Culture medium was changed
daily. Recombinant Wnt3a,
Bmp4, ActivinA, Dkk1 and Noggin were obtained from R&D
Systems.
Cell and colony stiffness measurement
Cell and colony stiffness were measured using magnetic twisting cytometry96267. A ferromagnetic bead of
~4 μm in dpan class="Disease">iameter is coated with Arg-Gly-Asp (RGD) peptides and bound to
the apical surface of cells. Magnetic twisting cytometry allows us to control
the loading frequency and the duration as well as the magnitude of force applied
to the cell. The bead displacement amplitude can then be correlated to the
applied mechanical force to determine the cell stiffness.
Dissolving fibrin gels
The 3D fibrin gels were dissolved using a solution mixture of Collagenase (Sigma
C0130) and Dispase II (Sigma D4693)68. Collagenase and Dispase II
were diluted by 2 ml PBS at the final concentpan class="Species">ration of 0.08 and 0.4%
(w/v), respectively. Adding 400 μl of the
solution to a well (24-well plate size) containing 250 μl
fibrin gel with 600 μl of existing culture medium will take
30 min to dissolve at 37 °C. The colony shape
changed little before and after transfer from 3D to 2D, suggesting that the
Collagenase- and Dispase II-dissolving solution did not affect the colony
integrity much. After centrifuging at 500 r.p.m.
(~56 g) for 2 min, the colonies were
re-suspended by pipetting a few times. About 80–100 colonies were
pipetted and transferred to the centre of the dish where the PA gel was.
3D fibrin gel cell culture and differentiation assay
Twenty-four-well plates were used to culture mpan class="Chemical">ESCs in the 3D fibrin gel. mESCs
were first trypsinized using TrypLE (Invitrogen) and suspended in the complete
ESC culture medium as described above. For each well, 500 ESCs were prepared in
125 μl of the medium. Cells in suspension were then placed
on ice while the subsequent steps were executed. Salmon fibrinogen solid
(Reagent Proteins) was dissolved in 125 μl of T7 buffer (pH
7.4, 50 mM Tris,
150 mM NaCl) to a
concentration of 2 mg ml−1. The
cells in suspension were then added to the fibrinogen mixture at a ratio of 1:1,
making the resulting fibrinogen concentration to
1 mg ml−1. Five microlitres
of thrombin
(0.1 U μl−1) were
then added to each well of the 24-well plate. A total of
250 μl of the cell–fibrinogen mixture was added
to each well and mixed with thrombin (Reagent Proteins). The plate was then incubated at
37°C for 10 min to solidify before adding 1 ml of
the complete ESC culture medium. Two-dimensional fibrin gels were prepared using
the same protocol as 3D fibrin gels but without premixing of cells. After the
gels were made, mESCs were seeded on top of the fibrin gels. Cells were cultured
in 3D or 2D fibrin gels up to 5 days. For differentiation assays, ESCs were
cultured in a medium without LIF (-LIF). The
αvβ3-blocking antagonist cRGDfV (Enzo Life Sciences) was
pre-diluted in the normal culture medium to the indicated concentrations before
being used for cell treatment.
Apoptosis staining
Propidium iodide
(PI, Sigma) was used to
label apoptotic pan class="Chemical">ESCs. Colonies after 5 days of culture were labelled with
PI according to the
manufacturer’s protocol. Staining of PI indicates that none or only a few
cells within the colonies are apoptotic (Supplementary Fig. 19).
EB formation assay
Hanging drop cultures were prehemical">pared using 25 μl droplets,
each having 600 cells to initpan class="Disease">iate EB formation69.
Undifferentiated ESCs were trypsinized and allowed to form EBs in the bottom of
the hanging drops made with the ES medium without LIF for 5 days. The different germ
layers were detected by immunofluorescence microscopy.
Immunofluorescence staining
ESCs in 3D fibrin gel culture were fixed with the fix buffer consisting of 4%
pan class="Chemical">formaldehyde (BioLegend)
for 20 min at room temperature. Cells were then permeabilized with
0.5% Triton X-100 (BioLegend) for 2 min and treated with blocking
buffer made of 2% BSA in PBS for 1 h. To examine the presence of
different germ layers, an anti-Gata6 primary antibody (Santa Cruz Biotechnology) was used
to label endoderm; an anti-Brachyury primary antibody (Abcam) was used to label
mesoderm; and an anti-Sox1
primary antibody (Abcam) was used to label ectoderm. Detection of germ layer
types was performed using appropriate Alexa-conjugated secondary antibodies
(Invitrogen). Cells were incubated with all primary antibodies (diluted with 2%
BSA buffer at a ratio of 1:200) overnight at 4 °C. After
being washed to remove unbound primary antibodies, cells were incubated with the
secondary antibody for 4 h under dark conditions. For E-cadherin staining, permeabilized
cells were incubated with a rabbit monoclonal anti-E-Cadherin antibody conjugated with
Alexa-488 (Cell Signaling) for 1 h before examining under a
fluorescence microscope.
Negative immunofluorescence control experiments were performed by staining
colonipan class="Chemical">es that were cultured in +LIF condition for 5 days for endoderm, mesoderm and ectoderm
layers (Supplementary Fig. 20a).
The undifferentiated colonies were first treated with primary antibodies
followed by the secondary antibody. For each germ layer, it was observed that
there were small negligible areas within the colony that were stained. We
therefore decided to stain colonies cultured in –LIF 3D conditions at day 5 with
individual primary antibodies or individual secondary antibody (Supplementary Fig. 20b). Colonies treated
with primary antibodies alone did not show any fluorescence, whereas colonies
treated with secondary antibody alone had some small fluorescent spots. These
suggest that there is some nonspecific staining of secondary antibody that has
not been unwashed out.
RNA interference
Cells were transfected with siRNA using Lipofectamine 2000 (Invitrogen) according
to manufacturer’s protocol. pan class="Species">Mouse siRNA silencer for Myh9 gene Myosin II-A (NMHC II-A) (Invitrogen, no. 262920) and
mouse siRNA silencer for Myh10 gene Myosin
II-B (NMHC
II-B) (Invitrogen, no. 176254) were obtained from Life
Technologies. Silencer Negative Control No. 1 siRNA (Invitrogen, AM4611)
was used as control.
Circularity index
The circularity of colonies was calculated using the formula of 4π
× (area)/(perimeter)2. A perfect circle has a value of
1.0.
Confocal imaging
After colonies were fixed and immunofluorpan class="Chemical">escently labelled, confocal microscopy
was performed using a Leica SP8-STED microscope to obtain 3D reconstructive
images of the colonies (Supplementary
Movies 1–3). A × 20 oil immersion objective was
used. Each colony was imaged using 250 z-stack images with each step of
~0.8 μm. Fluorescence was detected using a
photomultiplier tube or Hybrid Detector (HyD).
RT–PCR analysis
RNA of mESC spheroids from 3D fibrin gel culture was extracted using pan class="Chemical">Trizol
reagent according to the supplier’s instruction (Invitrogen).
Extracted mRNA was then used for reverse transcription using SSIIRT
(Invitrogen). The cDNA was then amplified using a PCR kit (QIAGEN). The
expression of Nanog,
Oct3/4, Sox2, Fgf5, Otx2, Sox1, Hand1, Brachyury, Twist2, Gata4, Gata6 and Sox17 mRNA was examined. The mRNA of
glyceraldehyde-3-phosphate dehydrogenase (GAPDH) was used as an internal
control. The primer sequences are shown in Supplementary Table 1.
Real-Time qRT–PCR analysis
OGTR1 cells were cultured for 5 days in –LIF 3D soft fibrin gels for 5 days.
Fibrin gels were dissolved and the differentpan class="Disease">iated colonies were dissociated with
0.25% TrypLE (Invitrogen), resuspended in PBS with 1% serum. Cells were isolated
into DsRed::Brachyury
fluorescence-expressing and DsRed-negative cells using fluorescence-activated
cell sorting (FACS; Beckman). First we used chemical differentiation factors to
analyse the DsRed-negative cells. The DsRed-negative cells were differentiated
into endoderm-like cells with continuous treatment of
100 ng ml−1 of ActivinA70 for 3 days in
regular –LIF
medium on gelatin-coated six-well plates. The DsRed-negative cells were
differentiated into ectoderm-like cells by gradually reducing serum in
–LIF medium
till the second day where the medium was replaced with serum-free medium
supplemented with 5 μM retinoic acid71 for the remaining
24 h on gelatin-coated six-well plates; Fig.
3). After treatment with retinoic
acid or with ActivinA, the DsRed-negative cells expressed high levels of
E-cadherin or low levels
of E-cadherin (Fig. 4). To obtain position-specific gene information, we used the
knowledge gained from the chemical differentiation method and isolated W4 cells
(OGTR1 cells were not used to avoid florescence interference during cell
sorting) that had been grown for 5 days in the soft fibrin gels in
–LIF condition
and then added them briefly to the top of the fibrin (binds to
avβ3 integrin) gels for 5 min.
The attached cells are likely to be mostly mesoderm-like cells. We gently
collected the unattached cells (presumably a mixture of ectoderm- and
endoderm-like cells) in the medium and stained them using anti-E-cadherin antibodies (primary
anti-E-cadherin antibody
(rat) DECMA-1; secondary antibody anti-rat-IgG FITC; both from Sigma), and then
we sorted these cells using FACS into high and low E-cadherin-expressing cells (Supplementary Fig. 3). The sorted
DsRed-positive cells (from the OGTR1 cell line), high E-cadherin expression cells and the
remainder low E-cadherin
expression cells were then analysed by real-time qRT–PCR (Fig. 2). All cDNA sequences were retrieved from the National
Center for Biotechnology Information (NCBI) database. All data were analysed
using comparative cycle threshold method for relative gene expression against
GAPDH. The primer sequences are shown in Supplementary Table 2.
Statistical analysis
Student’s t-test was applied to all statistical analyspan class="Chemical">es.
Author contributions
Y.-C.P. and N.W. conceived the project; Y.-C.P. and N.W. designed the experiments.
Y.-C.P., J.C., Y.H., H.Y., S.Z., J.C., D.C.W., L.W., Q.J., R.S., W.Y., Y.T., A.T.
and T.S.T. carried out the experiments and analysed the data. Y.-C.P, T.S.T. and
N.W. wrote the manuscript.
Additional information
How to cite this article: Poh, Y.-C. et al. Generation of organized
germ layers from a single pan class="Species">mouse embryonic stem cell. Nat. Commun. 5:4000 doi:
10.1038/ncomms5000 (2014).
Supplementary Figures, Tables and References
Supplementary Figures 1-20, Supplementary Tablpan class="Chemical">es 1-2 and Supplementary
References
Supplementary Movie 1
Representative 3D imagpan class="Chemical">es of a spherical colony with proper positioning of the
endoderm layer. A colony was imaged 5 days after transferred from 3D fibrin
gels to 2D collagen-1 coated polyacrylamide gels. Left: Endodermal cells
immunofluorescently labelled with an anti-Gata6 antibody (red). Note that
some small fluorescent spots that are not in the centre of the colony are
likely due to nonspecific staining of unwashed out secondary antibodies.
Middle: Cell nuclei labelled with DAPI (blue). Right: A merged image of the
DAPI-labelled and anti-Gata6 antibody-stained colony. Gata6-positive cells
are localized to the inner most core of the colony. The movie provides the
view of a half of a colony due to the limited working distance of the
confocal microscope's objective lens.
Supplementary Movie 2
Representative 3D image of a spherical colony with proper positioning of the
mpan class="Chemical">esoderm layer. A colony was imaged 5 days after transferred from 3D fibrin
gels to 2D collagen-1 coated polyacrylamide gels. Left: Mesodermal cells immunofluorescently labelled with an anti-Brachyury antibody (red). Middle: Cell nuclei labelled with DAPI (blue). Right: A merged image of the DAPI-labelled and the anti-Brachyury antibody stained colony. Brachyury-positive cells are localized to the middle layer within the colony. The movie provides the view of a half of a colony due to the limited working distance of the confocal microscope's objective lens.
Supplementary Movie 3
Representative 3D image of a spherical colony with proper positioning of the
ectoderm layer. A colony was imaged 5 days after transferred from 3D fibrin
gels to 2D collagen-1 coated pan class="Chemical">polyacrylamide gels. Left: Ectodermal cells
immunofluorescently labelled with an anti-Sox1 antibody (red). Middle: Cell
nuclei labelled with DAPI (blue). Right: A merged image of the DAPI-labelled
and anti-Sox1 antibody stained colony. Sox1-positive cells are localized to
the outermost periphery of the colony. The movie provides the view of a half
of a colony due to the limited working distance of the confocal microscope's
objective lens.
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