Literature DB >> 33377060

Protocol for BATTLE-1EX: A High-Resolution Imaging Method to Visualize Whole Synaptic Structures and their Components in the Nervous System.

Akitoshi Inoue1, Takuya Kobayashi1, Hirokazu Hirai2,3, Noriko Kanaya4, Keigo Kohara4.   

Abstract

This protocol describes BATTLE-1EX, which is a combined method of BATTLE-1 and expansion microscopy to obtain high-resolution imaging of whole synaptic structures and their components of hippocampal neural circuits. BATTLE-1 uses two genetically engineered recombinase proteins and competition between two recombinases that can be independently titrated, resulting in a tunable proportion of mCherry+/YFP- and YFP+/mCherry- cells. As a combinational method, BATTLE-1EX has the potential to visualize and dissect whole synaptic structures in numerous regions in the brain. For complete details on the use and execution of this protocol, please refer to Kohara et al. (2020).
© 2020 The Author(s).

Entities:  

Keywords:  Microscopy; Molecular Biology; Neuroscience

Mesh:

Year:  2020        PMID: 33377060      PMCID: PMC7757352          DOI: 10.1016/j.xpro.2020.100166

Source DB:  PubMed          Journal:  STAR Protoc        ISSN: 2666-1667


Before You Begin

Dissection of the synaptic structures and their components is crucial to understanding the basal and functional mechanisms of the brain. To visualize the whole structure of synaptic connections, it is quite difficult, but presynaptic and postsynaptic neurons are required to be labeled sparsely in the highly dense neuronal circuit by different colors. To date, considerable efforts have been made to visualize and dissect whole synaptic structures using light microscopy, but most of these studies only succeeded in labeling half of the synaptic structures (Nimchinsky et al., 2002; Chen et al., 2015; Luo et al., 2016) such as spines or presynaptic terminals alone. BATTLE-1 technology (Kohara et al., 2020) enables split-tunable allocation of transgenes by recombinase “battle.” In this protocol, Cre and FLPO are expressed under the control of CamKIIa promoter which drives expression in the excitatory neurons (Benson et al., 1992) by lentivirus injection into the mouse hippocampus (Figure 1A). The Cre transgene flanked by two FRT5 is designed to be a target of the FLPO recombinase (Schlake and Bode, 1994). The FLPO transgene flanked by two loxN is designed to be a target of the Cre recombinase (Livet et al., 2007). In this configuration, Cre is oriented to excise the FLPO transgene, which is then oriented to excise the Cre transgene. Three weeks later, Cre-dependent AAV expressing mCherry and FLPO-dependent one expressing YFP are injected into the same regions. Cre and FLPO “battle” result in splitting allocation of YFP and mCherry (Figure 1B). YFP and mCherry expression is easily tunable by changing the ratio of the Cre and FLPO expression.
Figure 1

BATTLE-1: Split-Tunable Allocation of Transgenes by Recombinase “Fights”

(A) In the BATTLE-1 technology, Cre and FLPO are expressed under the control of CamKIIa promoter. The Cre transgene flanked by two FRT5 is designed to be a target of the FLPO recombinase. The FLPO transgene flanked by two loxN is designed to be a target of the Cre recombinase. Cre- and FLPO-dependent AAVs expressing mCherry and YFP, respectively, were used.

(B) Illustration shows the battle of recombinases and the BATTLE-1 system. After the first injection of mixed viruses, Cre and FLPO started recombinase battles in each infected neuron. Then, only the winning recombinase survived to induce its specific mutually exclusive allocation of transgenes (mCherry or YFP). Adapted from Figures 1A and 1H in Kohara et al. (2020).

Expansion microscopy is a technique developed in the Ed Boyden lab that physically enlarged samples through an isotropic chemical expansion process (Chen et al., 2015; Tillberg et al., 2016; Asano et al., 2018). In this method, immunostained proteins are anchored to the swellable gel by cross-linking molecule (acryloyl-X). Proteinase K digestion and gel swelling by water result in sample expansion linearly by about four times without changing protein placement. In our case, a lens with a diffraction limit of 280 nm (60×, 1.2 numerical aperture water objective from Olympus) would obtain an effective resolution of 280 nm/4 = 70 nm. Using BATTLE-1EX, whole synaptic structures consisting of YFP-positive presynaptic terminals from the dentate gyrus and mCherry-positive postsynaptic spines of CA3 pyramidal neurons can be clearly visualized. Furthermore, the localizations of Bassoon and Homer, which are presynaptic and postsynaptic proteins, respectively, can also be simultaneously identified in whole synaptic structures. BATTLE-1: Split-Tunable Allocation of Transgenes by Recombinase “Fights” (A) In the BATTLE-1 technology, Cre and FLPO are expressed under the control of CamKIIa promoter. The Cre transgene flanked by two FRT5 is designed to be a target of the FLPO recombinase. The FLPO transgene flanked by two loxN is designed to be a target of the Cre recombinase. Cre- and FLPO-dependent AAVs expressing mCherry and YFP, respectively, were used. (B) Illustration shows the battle of recombinases and the BATTLE-1 system. After the first injection of mixed viruses, Cre and FLPO started recombinase battles in each infected neuron. Then, only the winning recombinase survived to induce its specific mutually exclusive allocation of transgenes (mCherry or YFP). Adapted from Figures 1A and 1H in Kohara et al. (2020).

Preparation of Lentiviruses and AAVs for BATTLE-1

Timing: several weeks Perform Lentivirus Preparation of BATTLE-1 according to Torashima et al., 2006. Increase plasmids of lentivirus BATTLE-1 (lentivirus-CamKIIa (1.3 kb)-FRT5-iCre-FRT5-WPRE and lentivirus-CamKIIa (1.3 kb)-loxN-FLPO-loxN-WPRE) by stbl3 competent cells using an endotoxin-free Giga prep kit or endotoxin-free Mega prep kit (20–200 μg). Virus packaging: Seed HEK293T cells (cultured in DMEM supplemented with 10% FBS, 100 U/mL penicillin, and 100 μg/mL streptomycin at 37°C in a 5% CO2 atmosphere) 2–4 × 106 cells in a 10-cm culture dish 24 h before transfection. Dilute vectors: Mix lentiviral packaging vectors (Invitrogen, 10 μg), and single lentiviral vector created above (10 μg) in sterile water to a total volume of 450 μL; then add 50 μL of 2.5 M CaCl2 and vortex. Drop 500 μL of 2× HEPES-buffer while vortexing and immediately add precipitate to the cultures before incubating overnight (14 h–18 h). Wash cultures twice with PBS and incubate additionally for 24 h. Filtrate collected medium through 0.22-μm membrane and centrifuge at 120,000 × g for 1.5 h at 4°C using a swinging bucket rotor. Suspend precipitated virus in 45 μL of PBS and store at −80°C until use. Determine each titer of lentiviruses of BATTLE-1 using Lenti-X™ qRT-PCR Titration Kit (Takara). AAV (serotype 9) preparation of BATTLE-1 can be done by availing of the AAV service offered by Addgene. Increase AAV backbone vectors (AAV-EF1a-Fflex-EYFP and AAV-EF1a-DIO-mCherry) by stbl3 competent cells using an endotoxin-free Giga prep kit or endotoxin-free Mega prep kit (20–200 μg). Avail of the AAV service offered by Addgene. Lentiviral and AAV backbone vectors are listed in the Key Resources Table. See Resource Availability section for requirement of vectors constructed in Kohara et al. (2020). Pause Point: Lentiviruses and AAVs of BATTLE-1 (5 μL each) were aliquoted on ice in the safety cabinet and stored in a freezer box at −80°C. CRITICAL: Using stable competent cells like stbl3 (Invitrogen) is essential to prevent unexpected recombination of lentiviral plasmid vector. We also recommend growing bacteria on the agar plate at 32°C, small-scale growth (5 mL) at 32°C, and large-scale growth (about 2 L) at 37°C for the same purpose. We confirm the existence of LTRs in lentiviral plasmid vector using restriction digestion (SmaI).

Preparation of Sharp Glass Pipettes

Timing: 1 h Make sharp glass pipettes by using micropipette puller and sharp glass pipettes (Narishige GD-1: 1-mm diameter glass pipette filled with filament). Break the tip of a glass pipette by pushing it slowly to clean the surface of box (for example, top lid of pipette man tip rack). Confirm that the diameter of the tip of the sharp glass pipette is between 30 and 40 μm through the binocular microscope (Narishige). Keep dozens of modified sharp glass pipettes in a home-made box with sticky rubber.

Setting Coordination of the Stereotaxic Injection Site

Timing: 30 min Determine stereotaxic injection site of the experiment using a ruler and pencil, according to the book “The Mouse Brain in Stereotaxic Coordinates” (Flanklin and Paxinos, 2008, coronal sections). Record anterior-posterior (AP) position, medio-lateral (ML) position, and dorso-ventral (DV) position of injection site of the experiment.

Preparation of BATTLE-1 Lentivirus Injection Solution

Timing: 15 min Prepare same titer viral solution of lentivirus-CamKIIa (1.3 kb)-FRT5-iCre-FRT5-WPRE and lentivirus-CamKIIa (1.3 kb)-loxN-FLPO-loxN-WPRE on ice just before the first injection experiment. Mix same volume of their lentiviruses on ice (lentivirus-CamKIIa (1.3 kb)-FRT5-iCre-FRT5-WPRE:lentivirus-CamKIIa (1.3 kb)-loxN-FLPO-loxN-WPRE = 1:1). Keep it on ice in the small cooler box. We prepare 1 μL mixed lentiviruses (lenti-CamKIIa-FRT5-Cre-FRT5:lenti-CamKIIa-loxN-FLPO-loxN = 1:1 [each virus consisted of 5 × 108 copies]) for single injection. Lower titer of lentiviruses also works. In the first injection experiment, do dosage effect experiment using the same titer of 1× lentivirus-mix solution (Cre:FLPO = 1:1) and 10× diluted lentivirus-mix solution (Cre:FLPO = 0.1:0.1). Determine the better concentration of lentiviruses in your experiment by checking the result of dosage effect experiment. You can save the cost of the experiments using the lower dosages of lentiviruses. If you prefer different splitting situations in which postsynaptic neurons are sparsely labeled with YFP, and presynaptic terminals are densely labeled with mCherry (Table 1), you can use a lentivirus-mix solution with different ratios (Cre:FLPO=10:1, or 100:1).
Table 1

Percentage of mCherry-, YFP-, and Double-Positive Cells Induced by BATTLE-1 with Different Ratios of Cre and FLPO

mCherry-Positive Cells (%) (Mean ± SEM)YFP-Positive Cells (%) (Mean ± SEM)mCherry, YFP− Double-Positive Cells (%) (Mean ± SEM)Viral Titers of BATTLE-1 LentivirusesTotal Cell and Mouse Numbers
Cre:FLPO 1:161.3 ± 5.838 ± 5.80.7 ± 0.25 × 108 copies eachn = 827, N = 5
Cre:FLPO 10:192 ± 1.47.4 ± 1.60.6 ± 0.45 × 108, 5 × 107 copies eachn = 876 N = 3
Cre:FLPO 100:198.7 ± 0.21.1 ± 0.20.2 ± 0.15 × 108, 5 × 106 copies eachN = 1,153, N = 3

The BATTLE-1 method mostly induced split-tunable expression of mCherry and YFP in dentate granule neurons in the hippocampus. The data of Cre:FLPO = 1:1, and Cre:FLPO= 1:0.01 were adopted from Figures 1D and 1G in Kohara et al., 2020.

Percentage of mCherry-, YFP-, and Double-Positive Cells Induced by BATTLE-1 with Different Ratios of Cre and FLPO The BATTLE-1 method mostly induced split-tunable expression of mCherry and YFP in dentate granule neurons in the hippocampus. The data of Cre:FLPO = 1:1, and Cre:FLPO= 1:0.01 were adopted from Figures 1D and 1G in Kohara et al., 2020.

Preparation of BATTLE-1 AAV Injection Solution

Timing: 15 min Prepare mixed AAV solution (AAV-EF1a-DIO-mCherry:AAV-EF1a-DIO-YFP = 1:1, titer: 1.43 × 1013 copies/mL each) on ice just before the second injection experiment. Keep it on ice in the small cooler box.

Key Resources Table

Materials and Equipment

Sterilize by filtration through a 0.22-μm filter. Store at −20°C. Prepare right before use. Store at 25°C for 3 months or 4°C for longer storage. Store at 4°C for 1 month. Store at 25°C. Store 10 mg/mL Acryloyl-X SE as aliquots of 20 μL each at −20°C for at least 1 month. Add PBS right before use. Store as aliquots of 1 mL each at −20°C for at least 1 month. Prepare at 4°C right before the gelation step. Store digestion buffer (without Proteinase K) as aliquots at −20°C for a few months. Add Proteinase K right before use.

Step-By-Step Method Details

Timing: 1 month in total A timeline of all main steps is summarized in the Graphical abstract. Briefly, it takes several hours for lentiviral and AAV injections. Three-week intervals between the first lentiviral and second AAV injections, and a one-week interval between the second AAV injection and brain sampling are needed. It takes 1 week for immunostaining and ExM.

First Stereotaxic Injection of BATTLE-1 Lentivirus into Mouse Brain

Timing: 2–4 h Perform stereotaxic injection of viruses according to Kohara et al. (2014) and Kohara et al. (2020). CRITICAL: Perform stereotaxic injection of BATTLE-1 lentivirus in the Biohazard room P2. Prepare surgery set up in the safety cabinet in P2 biosafety room. Place the stereotaxic injection systems on the safety cabinet. Prepare the surgery tools, suture needle with thread, and microdrill on the safety cabinet. Prepare skin marker, cotton swabs, and ointment pot (a box for used pipette tip attached with viral liquid) added with commercial chlorine disinfecting cleaner (Hypochlorous acid >0.1%). Prepare pipette man (P2, P20, P200) and filtered tips on the safety cabinet. Put 50 mL autoclaved PBS and isodine. Place the anesthetic machine for isoflurane beside the safety cabinet and fill with isoflurane. Connect the tube between anesthetic machine and gasmask attached in stereotaxic injection system. Connect the tube between the extra isoflurane retrieve bottle and the gas mask attached in stereotaxic injection system. Place a small desk stand with a magnifying glass on the safety cabinet. Prepare small square parafilms (about 1 cm × 1 cm) for back-filling sharp glass pipette with virus solution. Place a small shaver on the side desk for cutting the skull hair of the mouse. Prepare Hamilton syringe and sharp glass pipettes on the desk in P2 biosafety room. Place a 50-mL centrifuge tube filled with mineral oil in the tube stand on the desk. Prepare Hamilton syringe, sharp glass pipette box, and backfill syringe with sharp tube. Remove metal joint fitting of Hamilton syringe and place it on the desk. Fill metal joint fitting with mineral oil on the desk. Fill mineral oil on the upper lid of 50-mL centrifuge tube on the desk. Insert the tip of Hamilton syringe without metal joint fitting (but with plastic compression fitting) into the upper lid of 50-mL centrifuge tube filled with mineral oil. Fill mineral oil in the Hamilton syringe and remove air in the Hamilton syringe by repeating plunger pushing and withdrawing. After removing the bubble air in the Hamilton syringe, connect the Hamilton syringe with metal joint fitting (avoid trapping any air). Backfill sharp glass pipette with mineral oil by using backfill syringe with sharp tube (avoid trapping any air bubbles in the sharp glass pipette). Connect carefully sharp glass pipette (filled with mineral oil) with Hamilton syringe (filled with mineral oil). Attach Hamilton syringe connected with sharp glass pipette to stereotaxic injector in the safety cabinet. Move attached Hamilton syringe to the highest position just above mouse head. (This position is probably the safest position during surgery to avoid your hand from unexpectedly touching a sharp glass pipette with virus.) Anesthetize mouse (older than 8 weeks) in the box filled with 3% isoflurane. Shave skull hair of anesthetized mouse using slim hair cutter. Fixation of mouse head with ear bars in stereotaxic injection system (Figure 2A).
Figure 2

Stereotaxic Injection System and Anesthetized Head-Fixed Mouse

(A) A representative picture of the stereotaxic injection system and a head-fixed mouse. The mouse is anesthetized by 3% isoflurane and an incision made on the skull skin.

(B) The magnified image of (A). Bregma point and Lambda point are shown.

Fix left ear bar in the appropriate position and unfixed right ear bar in stereotaxic injection system. Insert fixed left ear bar into left ear canal of mouse. Adjust mouse head direction in parallel to ground in that state. Insert right ear bar (in flexible state) around the right ear canal of mouse. When right ear bar is adequately inserted into right ear canal of mouse, mouse skull moves with movement of right ear bar. Fix the right ear bar when it is adequately inserted into the ear canal. Confirm that the mouse head can rotate vertically to the fixed ear bar. Fit gas anesthesia mask to mouse nose. Adjust gas anesthesia mask z-position at roughly good position. Stereotaxic Injection System and Anesthetized Head-Fixed Mouse (A) A representative picture of the stereotaxic injection system and a head-fixed mouse. The mouse is anesthetized by 3% isoflurane and an incision made on the skull skin. (B) The magnified image of (A). Bregma point and Lambda point are shown. Apply eye ointment by cotton swabs on mouse eyes to prevent dry eyes. Sanitize mouse head hair with povidone iodine and cotton swabs. Cover mouse body with a trimmed surgical paper. Make an incision on the mouse head skin (Figure 2B). Use small surgical clamps to expose skull bone and wipe jelly on the skull by cotton swab. Mark points at Bregma and Lambda using skin marker. Move and lower sharp glass pipette to just above the Lambda point by using magnifying stand glass (×5). Contact the tip of sharp glass pipette with the surface of skull at Lambda point. Monitor the tip through magnifying stand glass (×5). Record dorso-ventral (DV) position of Lambda point by reading scale of stereotaxic injection system. Upper and move sharp glass pipette to Bregma. Contact the tip of sharp glass pipette with the surface of skull at Bregma point. Monitor the tip through magnifying stand glass (×5). Record DV position of Bregma point by reading scale of stereotaxic injection system. When DV position of Bregma does not equal to that of Lambda, adjust the position of gas anesthesia mask. Confirm that DV position of Bregma equals that of Lambda and record the anterior-posterior (AP) position and medio-lateral (ML) position of Bregma. Move the sharp glass pipette to the injection site determined in the preparation step. Mark the injection site using skin marker. Drill slowly at marked injection site using microdrill. When the skull bone becomes thin, make a hole carefully using the bent tip of the needle. Dig up the small bones at the injection site by the bent tip of the needle. Remove blood by cotton swabs and apply sterilized PBS. Place a small piece of parafilm on the ear bar. Apply 2 μL of mixed lentiviruses on a small piece of parafilm. Lower sharp glass pipette into the water drop of mixed lentiviruses. Suck up 1.2–1.5 μL of mixed lentiviruses into a sharp glass pipette (speed: 90 nL/s) by pressing the button of microsyringe controller micro4 (as lentivirus is relatively unstable at room temperature (22°C–26°C), load only necessary volume of lentivirus solution for single injection). Move the sharp glass pipette to the injection site and lower it to a position 0.3 mm deeper than the injection site and then return to injection site (make some space around the injection site for injection). Inject 1 μL of mixed lentiviruses solution (speed: 30 nL/s). Wait for 5 min. Quick retrieving of a sharp glass pipette from the injection site just after injection probably causes spread of lentiviruses to the needle track. Upper the sharp glass pipette. Stitch skin of mouse head. Place the mouse in a new cage and heat the cage by the heater sheet until the mouse becomes awake. Wait for 3 weeks until the second AAV injection.

Second Stereotaxic Injection of BATTLE-1 AAV into Mouse Brain

Timing: 2–4 h Prepare surgery set up in the safety cabinet in P2 biosafety room in the same manner as the first injection three weeks after the first surgery. All processes are the same as the first injection except the following steps. The skull bone at the injection site is usually thin because of the first injection. Make the injection hole by a vent needle. Inject 1 μL of mixed AAV solution into the same injection site as the first one (speed: 30 nL/s) Wait for 5 min. Inject 1 μL of mixed AAV solution into the same injection again (speed: 30 nL/s) The subsequent surgery processes are same as the first injection. Wait for 1 week until the brain section. CRITICAL: Lentivirus can be inactivated by 70% ethanol, but AAV is not inactivated by 70% ethanol. Use hypochlorous acid (>0.1%) to sterilize the used tip for AAV.

Preparation of Brain Sections

Timing: 3 days Sampling: Anesthetize mice with an intraperitoneal administration (5 mL/kg body weight) of a mixed anesthetic (medetomidine, midazolam, and butorphanol), then perfuse transcardially with ice-cold 4% PFA in PBS using a peristaltic pump. Postfix removed brain in the same solution for 24 h, transfer to 30% sucrose in PBS, and embed in optimal cutting temperature compound. Freeze brain with isopentane and liquid nitrogen. Pause Point: Sample can be stored at −80°C until use. Cryosection: Section brain sagittally 60-μm thick using cryostat (Leica). Transfer sections in PBS to the 12-well plate. The protocols for brain sections can be modified by target proteins and samples. We cut the brain 60 μm thick in this protocol, but thinner slices may be better for antibody penetration. Using a vibratome to cut the brain without freezing is also an alternative. Roughly check the fluorescence of the sections through the 12-well plate using inverted microscope to select sections for Expansion microscopy (ExM). Pause Point: Sample can be stored in PBS with 0.02% sodium azide at 4°C in the dark until use.

Immunostaining

Timing: 1 week The protocols for immunostaining can be modified by your target proteins and samples. For immunostaining of the free-floating sections, we use parafilm well plate that was made by pressing a magnetic stirrer bar on parafilm-covered empty chip tray (Figure 3A and 3B). We drop 100 μL buffer for one brain section in the well and use a paintbrush to transfer sections between the wells (Figure 3C). To avoid drying samples during incubation, add water to the bottom of the chip tray.
Figure 3

Parafilm Well Plate for Immunostaining

(A) Cover parafilm on the empty chip tray.

(B) Press a magnetic stirrer on parafilm to make wells.

(C) Use a paintbrush for sample transfer between wells.

Antigen retrieval: incubate freely floating sections in citrate buffer at 80°C for 30 min in a 1.5-mL tube, and then allowed to cool at room temperature (22°C–26°C) slowly. The sections were washed five times with PBS for 5 min. Rough trimming of the sections by Iris scissors before immunostaining is recommended to save reagent. The antigen retrieval step is optional but showed strong effect on Bassoon immunostaining in our experiment. Blocking: Incubate sections in blocking buffer in the parafilm well plate for 1 h at room temperature (22°C–26°C) with shaking. Primary antibody staining: Incubate sections with primary chicken polyclonal antibody to GFP (1:500), rat monoclonal antibody to RFP (1:100), mouse monoclonal antibody to Bassoon (1:100), and rabbit polyclonal antibody to Homer1 (1:100) in blocking buffer for 2 days (44 h–52 h) at 4°C, followed by washing four times with blocking buffer, each time for 5 min with shaking. Secondary antibody staining: Incubate sections with secondary anti-chicken donkey antibody conjugated with Alexa488 dye (1:200), anti-rat donkey antibody conjugated with Alexa568 dye (1:100), anti-mouse goat antibody conjugated with Atto647N dye (1:100), and anti-rabbit goat antibody conjugated with CF405M dye (1:100) in blocking buffer for 24 h at 4˚C with shaking. Wash sections three times with blocking buffer, three times with high salt PBS, and three times with PBS, each time for 5 min with shaking. For the ExM, we changed the antibody concentration higher and the incubation time longer than usual immunostaining because fluorescent signals become weak in the expansion step. Parafilm Well Plate for Immunostaining (A) Cover parafilm on the empty chip tray. (B) Press a magnetic stirrer on parafilm to make wells. (C) Use a paintbrush for sample transfer between wells.

ExM and Imaging

Timing: 4 days ExM was performed according to a protocol published by Ed Boyden lab (Asano et al., 2018). For details on the ExM, please refer to http://expansionmicroscopy.org/. Anchoring to gel: Incubate sections with Acryloyl-X (0.1 mg/mL) in PBS in 1.5-mL tube for more than 6 h at room temperature (22°C–26°C) with no shaking. Wash three times with PBS, each time for 5 min. Infiltrate gelling solution: Incubate sections with the gelling solution in 1.5-mL tube for 30 min at 4˚C in the dark. Remove PBS before anchoring and gelling by washing once with reagent. Gelling solution should be made just before use by mixing monomer solution, 4-hydroxy-TEMPO (inhibitor), APS, and TEMED (initiator, add last) and be kept at 4°C to prevent premature polymerization. Gelation: Cut coverslip with a glasscutter and place two of them on the glass slide as spacers (Figures 4A and 4B). Drop 50 μL of gelling solution and transfer sections using paintbrush (Figures 4C and 4D). Slices are sandwiched between glass slide and top coverslip and incubate for 2 h at 37°C (Figures 4E and 4F).
Figure 4

The Construction of the Gelling Chamber

(A) Cut coverslips with glasscutter.

(B) Place coverslips on the glass slide.

(C) Drop gelling buffer on the glass slide.

(D) Transfer sections into the buffer.

(E and F) Place a coverslip on the sample.

The Construction of the Gelling Chamber (A) Cut coverslips with glasscutter. (B) Place coverslips on the glass slide. (C) Drop gelling buffer on the glass slide. (D) Transfer sections into the buffer. (E and F) Place a coverslip on the sample. Digestion: Trim hippocampus regions minimally from gelled sections with a razor blade under a stereo microscope (Leica S9i) before detaching from the gel chambers (Figures 5A and 5B). Drop digestion buffer on the sample and peel off gently from the edge (Figures 5C–5E). Immerse sections in the 500 μL of digestion buffer at room temperature (22°C–26°C) for 12 h. Wash three times with PBS for 5 min.
Figure 5

Detaching Gel of the Hippocampal Region from the Gelling Chamber

(A–C) Trim the hippocampal region with a razorblade.

(D) Drop digestion buffer on gel.

(E) Detach gel from the edge with a paintbrush.

Detaching Gel of the Hippocampal Region from the Gelling Chamber (A–C) Trim the hippocampal region with a razorblade. (D) Drop digestion buffer on gel. (E) Detach gel from the edge with a paintbrush. Trimming the gel into an asymmetric shape is recommended to deduce the orientation easily. Be careful of losing a sample that becomes clear and invisible in the buffer after digestion. We recommend changing buffer by absorbing it with Kimwipes. Pause Point: Sample can be stored in PBS at 4°C in the dark until expansion. Expansion: Transfer gels into new container that is enough size for expanded gels. Wash samples three times with water for 15 min to reach the final expansion size (×4 linearly, Figures 6A and 6B).
Figure 6

The Construction of the Imaging Chamber

(A and B) Comparison of the gels before and after expansion.

(C) Put expanded gel on the coverslip.

(D) Put silicon sheet surrounding the gel.

(E and F) Put silicon sheet on the sample.

The Construction of the Imaging Chamber (A and B) Comparison of the gels before and after expansion. (C) Put expanded gel on the coverslip. (D) Put silicon sheet surrounding the gel. (E and F) Put silicon sheet on the sample. Imaging: Transfer samples on coverslip with paintbrush and remove extra buffer by Kimwipes. Silicon sheets (0.5-mm thick) are used as spacers surrounding the sample to prevent sample compression (Figures 6C and 6D). To avoid sample drifting during imaging, samples are sandwiched between a coverslip and silicon sheets (Figures 6E and 6F). Acquire fluorescence images using an inverted confocal fluorescent microscope (Olympus FV3000, using 10×/0.40 NA, 20×/0.70 NA, and 60×/1.20 NA water objective from Olympus). Use Imaris 9.1 (Bitplane) for generating three-dimensional (3D) volume rendering projection images or 3D maximum intensity projection images (Figures 7A and 7B).
Figure 7

Representative Maximum Intensity Projection Three-Dimensional (3D) Images of the Hippocampus of BATTLE-1EX Slices

(A) Hilar mossy cells in the hippocampus.

(B) CA3 pyramidal cells in the hippocampus. Green and red show YFP and mCherry, respectively. Scale bar, 20 μm.

Representative Maximum Intensity Projection Three-Dimensional (3D) Images of the Hippocampus of BATTLE-1EX Slices (A) Hilar mossy cells in the hippocampus. (B) CA3 pyramidal cells in the hippocampus. Green and red show YFP and mCherry, respectively. Scale bar, 20 μm. Excess removal of surrounding water results in shrinking of the samples. Pause Point: After the imaging, samples can be stored in the shrunken state in PBS at 4°C in the dark.

Expected Outcomes

Capturing images of the whole synaptic structures consisting of YFP-positive presynaptic terminals and mCherry-positive postsynaptic spines of excitatory neurons (Figures 7A and 7B) (also mCherry-positive presynaptic terminals and YFP-positive postsynaptic spines), and localization of Bassoon and Homer are simultaneously visualized in the synapses in the brain region which you are interested (Figures 8A–8E; in the hippocampus) (for example, hippocampus, cerebral cortex, etc.).
Figure 8

Representative Maximum Intensity Projection 3D Image of the Synapse in the Hippocampus

(A–C) DG-CA3 synapses in the hippocampus. Scale bar, 5 μm.

(D) Enlarged image of box area in (B).

(E) Enlarged image of box area in (C). Scale bar, 2 μm. Blue, green, red, and white show YFP, mCherry, Homer, and Bassoon, respectively.

Representative Maximum Intensity Projection 3D Image of the Synapse in the Hippocampus (A–C) DG-CA3 synapses in the hippocampus. Scale bar, 5 μm. (D) Enlarged image of box area in (B). (E) Enlarged image of box area in (C). Scale bar, 2 μm. Blue, green, red, and white show YFP, mCherry, Homer, and Bassoon, respectively. Neural circuits are connected and modulated by a considerable number of synapses. It has been an enormous challenge for many decades to develop a method for visualizing whole synaptic morphologies with simultaneous identification of endogenous synaptic proteins by light (Südhof and Malenka, 2008) (Arenkiel and Ehlers, 2009). The BATTLE-1 strategy and BATTLE-1EX method enabled the visualization of entire synaptic structures with endogenous synaptic proteins (Kohara et al., 2020). Lentivirus and AAV with serotype 9 used in the first version of BATTLE-1 are known to be infectable to the broad region of the brain. Furthermore, the CamKIIa promoter in the first version of BATTLE-1 is active in excitatory neurons in many brain areas (Benson et al., 1992). Therefore, researchers can apply BATTLE-1EX to the hippocampus or other regions. In future studies, AAV with different serotypes, such as the retrograde serotype and universal promoter, like actin promoter, might also be applied to the next-generation of BATTLE methods (Tervo et al., 2016). BATTLE-1EX may broadly contribute to research on synapses not only in fundamental neuroscience but also in disease neuroscience.

Limitations

In the current protocol, the BATTLE-recombinase systems could be applied to local regions of interest, such as the hippocampus (or cerebral cortex), but not brain-wide global regions.

Troubleshooting

Problem 1

Difficult to find synapses composed of YFP and mCherry-positive neurons (step 55).

Potential Solution

It is recommended to capture 3D image broadly by green and red colors using low-magnification objective lens first and use the 3D image as the quick overview for finding synapses. 60× water objective lens is recommended for high-resolution imaging because it is needed to switch the objective frequently to find synapses.

Problem 2

Low fluorescence after expansion (steps 48 and 49). We chose the fluorescent dye (Tillberg et al., 2016) because some fluorescent dyes such as cyanine family lose its signal during ExM. In addition, we prolonged incubation times of primary antibody for 2 days and of secondary antibody for 1 day to retain the signals after expansion. all antibodies excepting primary anti-GFP (chicken, 1:500) and secondary anti-chicken (Alexa488, 1:200) were used at a dilution of 1:100.

Problem 3

Photobleaching (step 55). In the fluorescent dyes used in this protocol, CF405M is subjected to photo bleaching during 3D imaging. To minimize the exposure time for the CF405M, we can adjust the imaging position using Alexa488, which maintains the intensity during the long imaging.

Resource Availability

Lead Contact

Further information and requests for resources and reagents should be directed to and will be fulfilled by the lead contact, Keigo Kohara, Email: koharake@hirakata.kmu.ac.jp.

Materials Availability

All unique/stable reagents generated in this study are available from the lead contact with a completed Materials Transfer Agreement.

Data and Code Availability

This study did not generate/analyze datasets and codes.
REAGENT or RESOURCESOURCEIDENTIFIER
Antibodies

chicken polyclonal antibody to GFPAbcamab13970
rat monoclonal antibody to RFPChromotek5f8-100
mouse monoclonal antibody to BassoonAbcamab82958
rabbit polyclonal antibody to Homer1SYSY#160003
anti-chicken donkey antibody conjugated with Alexa488 dyeJackson#703-545-155
anti-rat donkey antibody conjugated with Alexa568 dyeAbcam#ab175710
anti-mouse goat antibody conjugated with Atto647N dyeRockland#50185
anti-rabbit goat antibody conjugated with CF405MBiotium#20373

Bacterial and Virus Strains

lentivirus-CamKIIa (1.3 kb)-FRT5-iCre-FRT5-WPREKohara et al. (2020)N/A
lentivirus-CamKIIa(1.3 kb)-loxN-FLPO-loxN-WPREKohara et al. (2020)N/A
AAV-EF1a-DIO-mCherry plasmid vectorAddgene#50462
AAV-EF1a-Fflex-EYFPKohara et al. (2020)N/A
Lentiviral packaging vectors (pLP1, pLP2 (pRev), pLP/VSVG)InvitrogenK4975-00
One Shot™ Stbl3™ Chemically Competent E. coliInvitrogenC737303

Experimental Models: Cell Lines

HEK293T cellsATCCCRL-11268

Experimental Models: Organisms/Strains

Mouse: C57BL6JCLEA Japann/a

Chemicals, Peptides, and Recombinant Proteins

SmaINew England BiolabsR0141S
Dulbecco’s modified Eagle’s mediumSigmaD6546
Penicillin-streptomycin-glutamine (100×)Invitrogen#10378-016
FBSInvitrogen#26140079
Sodium AcrylateSigma#408220
AcrylamideSigmaA9099
N,N′-MethylenebisacrylamideSigmaM7279
4-Hydroxy-TEMPOSigma#176141
Ammonium Persulfate (APS)SigmaA3678
N,N,N′,N′-Tetramethylethylenediamine (TEMED)SigmaT7024
Acryloyl-X SEInvitrogen™A20770
Proteinase KNew England BiolabsP8107S
Triton X-100 Polyethylene Glycol Mono-4-octylphenyl EtherNacalai#12967-45
Tween-20Santa Cruz Biotechnology#23926-35
Tris (hydroxymethyl) aminomethaneNacalai#35401-25
EDTA (2NA)FUJIFILM Wako#345-01865
Paraformaldehyde (PFA), powderNacalai#26126-25
Phosphate Buffered Saline (PBS) Tablets, pH 7.4TaKaRaT9181
HEPESFUJIFILM Wako#342-01375
Guanidine HydrochlorideFUJIFILM Wako#072-05001
Trisodium CitrateFUJIFILM Wako#203-13605
Sodium azideNacalai#31208-82
Mineral OilNacalai#23306-84
Tarivid ophthalmic ointment 0.3%SantenN/A

Critical Commercial Assays

EndoFree Plasmid Mega KitQIAGEN#12381
Lenti-X™ qRT-PCR Titration KitTakara#631235

Software and Algorithms

FV31S-SWOLYMPUSN/A
Imaris 9.1BitplaneN/A

Other

Steriflip-GP filter (0.22-μm) unitMilliporeSCGP00525
FV3000 Confocal Laser Scanning MicroscopeOLYMPUSN/A
S9i stereo microscopeLeicaN/A
10-cm cell culture dishesFalcon#353003
Passive gas anesthesia maskWPI#505147
MEDI SHEETSANSYO#23-1079
Desk stand Magnifire (×5)SANWA DIRECT#400-CAM019
Micro DrillWPI#503598
Mineral OilNacalai#23306-84
Isodine 10%mMeiji2612701Q3318
IsofluraneFUJIFILM099-06571
MidazolamSANDOZN/A
DOMITORZENOAQN/A
VetorphaleMeijiv024094
Foam Cleaning Heiter-1000 (Commercial Chlorine Disinfecting Cleaner)KaoN/A
MicroFil 28 gWPIMF28G67-5
HAMILTON syringeHAMILTON#1701RN
DUAL FERRULE, RN ADAPTOR, 1MMHAMILTON#55750-01
Glass Capillary with FilamentNARISHIGEGD-1
Micropipette PullerSUTTER INSTRUMENTP-97/IVF
MicroforgeNARISHIGEMF-900
Stereotaxic systemWPITAXIC600
SYS-MICRO4WPISYS-MICRO4
Small scissorsHammacherHSB 002-09
TweezersHammacherHSC 184-10
Small surgical clampSANSYO#91-3101
Hemostatic forcepsSANSYOF-2A
Threaded suture needleNatsume SeisakusyoCE1440N2NT
NARCOBIT-E (anesthetic machine)Natsume SeisakusyoKN-1071-1
Vapor GuardVetEquip#931401
CryostatLeicaCM3050 S
Peristaltic pumpATTOSJ-1211 2-H
Microtome replacement razorFEATHER Safety RazorC35
Silicone Rubber Sheet (Thickness 0.5 mm)TOGAWA RUBBERK-125
Super Frost Slide Glass PinkMATSUNAMI#2-150-03
NEO Cover glass 25 × 60MATSUNAMI#83-0225-3
NEO Cover glass 24 × 60MATSUNAMI#83-0217-3
NEO Cover glass 24 × 32MATSUNAMI#83-0211-3
OCT CompoundSakura Finetek Japan#45833
2× HEPES-BufferFinal ConcentrationAmount
HEPES50 mM1.2 g
Na2HPO4 ⋅2H2O350 mM0.027 g
NaCl (5 M)280 mM5.6 mL
NaOHn/aAdjust pH to 7.05
ddH2On/aAdjust to 100 mL
Totaln/a100 mL

Sterilize by filtration through a 0.22-μm filter. Store at −20°C.

Mixed AnestheticFinal ConcentrationAmount
Domitor (medetomidine 1 mg/mL)0.06 mg/mL0.3 mL
Dormicum (midazolam 5 mg/mL)0.8 mg/mL0.8 mL
Vetorphale (butorphanol 5 mg/mL )1 mg/mL1 mL
Salinen/a2.9 mL
Totaln/a5 mL

Prepare right before use.

Citrate Buffer pH6.0Final ConcentrationAmount
trisodium citrate10 mM294 mg
Tween 20 (10%)0.05%0.5 mL
ddH2On/aup to 100 mL
Totaln/a100 mL

Store at 25°C for 3 months or 4°C for longer storage.

Blocking BufferFinal ConcentrationAmount
BSA2.50%2.5 g
Triton X-100 (10%)0.10%1 mL
ddH2On/a99 mL
Totaln/a100 mL

Store at 4°C for 1 month.

High Salt PBSFinal Concentration (mM or μM)Amount
10× PBSn/a10 mL
NaCl (5 M)0.4 M8 mL
ddH2On/a82 mL
Totaln/a100 mL

Store at 25°C.

AcX BufferFinal ConcentrationAmount
Acryloyl-X SE (10 mg/mL, DMSO)0.1 mg/mL10 μL
1× PBSn/a990 μL
Totaln/a1 mL

Store 10 mg/mL Acryloyl-X SE as aliquots of 20 μL each at −20°C for at least 1 month. Add PBS right before use.

Monomer SolutionFinal Concentration (After Making Gelling Solution)Amount
Sodium acrylate (4M)900 mM2.25 mL
Acrylamide (7M)350 mM0.5 mL
N,N′-Methylenebisacrylamide (130 mM)9.75 mM0.75 mL
NaCl (5 M)2 M4 mL
10× PBSn/a1 mL
ddH2On/a0.9 mL
Totaln/a9.4 mL

Store as aliquots of 1 mL each at −20°C for at least 1 month.

Gelling SolutionFinal ConcentrationAmount
Monomer solutionn/a188 μL
4-hydroxy-TEMPO (0.5%)0.01%4 μL
TEMED (10%)0.2%4 μL
APS (10%)0.2%4 μL
Totaln/a200 μL

Prepare at 4°C right before the gelation step.

Digestion BufferFinal ConcentrationAmount
Tris-HCl pH8 (1 M)50 mM0.5 mL
EDTA (0.5 M)1 mM0.02 mL
Guanidine Hydrochloride (8 M)0.8 M1 mL
Triton X-100 (10%)0.5%0.5 mL
ddH2On/a7.88 mL
Proteinase K (800 units/mL)8 units/mL0.1 mL
Totaln/a10 mL

Store digestion buffer (without Proteinase K) as aliquots at −20°C for a few months. Add Proteinase K right before use.

  14 in total

1.  Contrasting patterns in the localization of glutamic acid decarboxylase and Ca2+/calmodulin protein kinase gene expression in the rat central nervous system.

Authors:  D L Benson; P J Isackson; C M Gall; E G Jones
Journal:  Neuroscience       Date:  1992       Impact factor: 3.590

2.  Exposure of lentiviral vectors to subneutral pH shifts the tropism from Purkinje cell to Bergmann glia.

Authors:  Takashi Torashima; Nobuaki Yamada; Masae Itoh; Akitsugu Yamamoto; Hirokazu Hirai
Journal:  Eur J Neurosci       Date:  2006-07-12       Impact factor: 3.386

3.  Use of mutated FLP recognition target (FRT) sites for the exchange of expression cassettes at defined chromosomal loci.

Authors:  T Schlake; J Bode
Journal:  Biochemistry       Date:  1994-11-01       Impact factor: 3.162

4.  A Designer AAV Variant Permits Efficient Retrograde Access to Projection Neurons.

Authors:  D Gowanlock R Tervo; Bum-Yeol Hwang; Sarada Viswanathan; Thomas Gaj; Maria Lavzin; Kimberly D Ritola; Sarah Lindo; Susan Michael; Elena Kuleshova; David Ojala; Cheng-Chiu Huang; Charles R Gerfen; Jackie Schiller; Joshua T Dudman; Adam W Hantman; Loren L Looger; David V Schaffer; Alla Y Karpova
Journal:  Neuron       Date:  2016-10-06       Impact factor: 17.173

5.  Expansion Microscopy: Protocols for Imaging Proteins and RNA in Cells and Tissues.

Authors:  Shoh M Asano; Ruixuan Gao; Asmamaw T Wassie; Paul W Tillberg; Fei Chen; Edward S Boyden
Journal:  Curr Protoc Cell Biol       Date:  2018-08-02

6.  Transgenic strategies for combinatorial expression of fluorescent proteins in the nervous system.

Authors:  Jean Livet; Tamily A Weissman; Hyuno Kang; Ryan W Draft; Ju Lu; Robyn A Bennis; Joshua R Sanes; Jeff W Lichtman
Journal:  Nature       Date:  2007-11-01       Impact factor: 49.962

7.  Supernova: A Versatile Vector System for Single-Cell Labeling and Gene Function Studies in vivo.

Authors:  Wenshu Luo; Hidenobu Mizuno; Ryohei Iwata; Shingo Nakazawa; Kosuke Yasuda; Shigeyoshi Itohara; Takuji Iwasato
Journal:  Sci Rep       Date:  2016-10-24       Impact factor: 4.379

8.  BATTLE: Genetically Engineered Strategies for Split-Tunable Allocation of Multiple Transgenes in the Nervous System.

Authors:  Keigo Kohara; Akitoshi Inoue; Yousuke Nakano; Hirokazu Hirai; Takuya Kobayashi; Masato Maruyama; Ryosuke Baba; Chiho Kawashima
Journal:  iScience       Date:  2020-06-07

9.  Understanding synapses: past, present, and future.

Authors:  Thomas C Südhof; Robert C Malenka
Journal:  Neuron       Date:  2008-11-06       Impact factor: 17.173

10.  Protein-retention expansion microscopy of cells and tissues labeled using standard fluorescent proteins and antibodies.

Authors:  Paul W Tillberg; Fei Chen; Kiryl D Piatkevich; Yongxin Zhao; Chih-Chieh Jay Yu; Brian P English; Linyi Gao; Anthony Martorell; Ho-Jun Suk; Fumiaki Yoshida; Ellen M DeGennaro; Douglas H Roossien; Guanyu Gong; Uthpala Seneviratne; Steven R Tannenbaum; Robert Desimone; Dawen Cai; Edward S Boyden
Journal:  Nat Biotechnol       Date:  2016-07-04       Impact factor: 54.908

View more

北京卡尤迪生物科技股份有限公司 © 2022-2023.