| Literature DB >> 33731940 |
Alejandro Aguilera-Castrejon1, Bernardo Oldak2, Rada Massarwa2, Tom Shani2, Nadir Ghanem3, Chen Itzkovich4, Sharon Slomovich5, Shadi Tarazi2, Jonathan Bayerl2, Valeriya Chugaeva2, Muneef Ayyash2, Shahd Ashouokhi2, Daoud Sheban2, Nir Livnat2, Lior Lasman2, Sergey Viukov2, Mirie Zerbib2, Yoseph Addadi6, Yoach Rais7, Saifeng Cheng7, Yonatan Stelzer7, Hadas Keren-Shaul6, Raanan Shlomo8, Noa Novershtern2, Itay Maza9,10, Jacob H Hanna11.
Abstract
The mammalian body plan is established shortly after the embryo implants into the maternal uterus, and our understanding of post-implantation developmental processes remains limited. Although pre- and peri-implantation mouse embryos are routinely cultured in vitro1,2, approaches for the robust culture of post-implantation embryos from egg cylinder stages until advanced organogenesis remain to be established. Here we present highly effective platforms for the ex utero culture of post-implantation mouse embryos, which enable the appropriate development of embryos from before gastrulation (embryonic day (E) 5.5) until the hindlimb formation stage (E11). Late gastrulating embryos (E7.5) are grown in three-dimensional rotating bottles, whereas extended culture from pre-gastrulation stages (E5.5 or E6.5) requires a combination of static and rotating bottle culture platforms. Histological, molecular and single-cell RNA sequencing analyses confirm that the ex utero cultured embryos recapitulate in utero development precisely. This culture system is amenable to the introduction of a variety of embryonic perturbations and micro-manipulations, the results of which can be followed ex utero for up to six days. The establishment of a system for robustly growing normal mouse embryos ex utero from pre-gastrulation to advanced organogenesis represents a valuable tool for investigating embryogenesis, as it eliminates the uterine barrier and allows researchers to mechanistically interrogate post-implantation morphogenesis and artificial embryogenesis in mammals.Entities:
Year: 2021 PMID: 33731940 DOI: 10.1038/s41586-021-03416-3
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Nature ISSN: 0028-0836 Impact factor: 49.962