| Literature DB >> 28293173 |
Swen Hülsmann1, Liya Hagos1, Heike Heuer2, Christian Schnell3.
Abstract
Since 2004, the red fluorescent dye Sulforhodamine 101 (SR101) has been boosting the functional analysis of astrocytes in a functional environment in an unprecedented way. However, two major limitations have been challenging the usefulness of this tool for cellular imaging: (i) SR101 is not as specific for astrocytes as previously reported; and (ii) discoveries of severe excitatory side effects of SR101 are bearing the risk of unwanted alteration of the system of interest. In this article, we summarize the current knowledge about SR101-labeling protocols and discuss the problems that arise from varying of the staining protocols. Furthermore, we provide a testable hypothesis for the observed hyper-excitability that can be observed when using SR101.Entities:
Keywords: astrocytes; imaging; neurosteroids; sulforhodamine 101; thyroxine
Year: 2017 PMID: 28293173 PMCID: PMC5328990 DOI: 10.3389/fncel.2017.00044
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Front Cell Neurosci ISSN: 1662-5102 Impact factor: 5.505
Figure 1(A) SR101-labeling of astrocytes identified by transgenic expression of EGFP (green) using TgN(hGFAP-EGFP)GFEC-Fki; (Nolte et al., 2001). Incubation of the brain slice with 1 μM SR101 for 20 min at 34°C followed 10 min of de-staining in artificial cerebrospinal fluid (aCSF) reveals that also some cells are nicely labeled by SR101 but do not express the astrocyte marker (asterisk). Note that the SR101 fluorescence is reaching the end feet of the astrocytes (fine arrow), but is weak in the distal processes of the astrocytes. (B) SR101-staining of oligodendrocytes that were identified by transgenic expression of EGFP using TgN(PLP-GFP) mice (Spassky et al., 2001). Slices were incubated in 1 μM SR101 for 140 min at 34°C followed 10 min of de-staining in aCSF. This method reveals that also cells from the oligodendrocyte linage (open arrows) are labeled by SR101. The intensity of SR101 is weaker as compared to neighboring GFP-negative cells. Image acquisition using 2-Photon excitation microscopy was described previously for astrocytes (Schnell et al., 2012) and oligodendrocytes (Hagos and Hülsmann, 2016). Pictures are surface mode projections of 100 μm image stacks generated by Imaris software (Bitplane).
Figure 2Neuronal labeling in the CA1 region of the hippocampus by SR101 does not require OATP1C1. (A) Labeling of slices from Oatp1c1 knock out mice (Mayerl et al., 2012) using 1 μM SR101 for 20 min at 34°C followed 10 min of de-staining in aCSF (Schnell et al., 2012). (B) Same protocol except that 100 μM of carbenoxolone (CBX) was added during the staining procedure. Note that labeling of neurons was not reduced by CBX. In (C,D) the staining procedure was altered and 165 μM SR101 was applied at room temperature (Kantor et al., 2012). This protocol leads to a much brighter staining of neurons (see lookup table that was used for all four panels) but not to a staining of astrocyte-like cells. Again application of 100 μM CBX did not block the neuronal labeling. (E) Statistical analysis of the fluorescence intensity of neurons. Threshold based pixel analysis using ImageJ software. The asterisks indicated significance between 165 μM and 1 μM SR101 treatments. ANOVA with all pairwise multiple comparison procedures (Holm-Sidak method; p < 0.05; n = 3 mice) using SigmaPlot software.
Figure 3Effects of neurosteroids on SR101 uptake in the hippocampus. (A) Astroglial EGFP-fluorescence (green) and SR101-fluorescence (red) in the hippocampus after a staining in control conditions (1 μM SR101 for 20 min at 34°C). (B) Reduced SR101-labeling of hippocampal astrocytes when the neurosteroid allopregnanolone sulfate (APAS, 100 μM) was included in the staining solution. Both figures show maximum intensity projection 51 stacks (2 μm distance). (C–F) Images from single layer for EGFP (C,D) and SR101 (E,F). Note the reduction of the intensity of SR101 after application of APAS (F). (G–I) Statistical analysis: (G) The reduction of the SR101-intensity by 100 μM APAS is significant (Mann-Whitney Rank Sum Test; p = 0.032; n = 5 slices; 3 mice). (H) Additionally the number of SR101 positive cells than can be identified after APAS is reduced (t-Test; p = 0.040). (I) The APAS-induced reduction of SR101 intensity in EGFP-positive cells and EGFP-negative SR101 labeled cells is not different (Mann-Whitney Rank Sum Test; p = 0.548). Asterisks in (G,H) indicate significance (p < 0.05).
The table summarizes labeling procedures that have been found to be not specific for astrocytes.
| Protocol | Cell types labeled | Reference | Excitatory side effects reported |
|---|---|---|---|
| Slice; 10–140 min incubation at 34°C, 0.5–1 μM SR101 | Astrocytes and oligodendrocytes | Wasseff and Scherer ( | Long-term negative shift of AP threshold, LTP; ≥1 μM SR101 for 10 min; (Kang et al., |
| Slice; incubation at RT (20–23°C), 165 μM SR101 | Neurons | Kantor et al. ( | – |
| Slice, incubation and OGD at RT, 100 μM SR101 | Neurons | Thompson et al. ( | – |
| Astrocyte and oligodendrocytes | Hill and Grutzendler ( | – | |
| Astrocytes and oligodendrocytes | Hill and Grutzendler ( | Seizure-like activity, ≥100 μM SR101 for 10 min (Rasmussen et al., |
RT, room temperature; OGD, oxygen glucose deprivation; PBS, Phosphate buffered saline; LTP, Long term potentiation.