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Chapter 14
Embryological Methods in Ascidians:
The Villefranche-sur-Mer Protocols
Christian Sardet, Alex McDougall, Hitoyoshi Yasuo,
Janet Chenevert, Gérard Pruliere, Rémi Dumollard, Clare Hudson,
Celine Hebras, Ngan Le Nguyen, and Alexandre Paix
Abstract
Ascidians (marine invertebrates: urochordates) are thought to be the closest sister groups of vertebrates.
They are particularly attractive models because of their non-duplicated genome and the fast and syn-
chronous development of large populations of eggs into simple tadpoles made of about 3,000 cells. As
a result of stereotyped asymmetric cleavage patterns all blastomeres become fate restricted between the
16- and 110 cell stage through inheritance of maternal determinants and/or cellular interactions. These
advantageous features have allowed advances in our understanding of the nature and role of maternal
determinants, inductive interactions, and gene networks that are involved in cell lineage specification and
differentiation of embryonic tissues. Ascidians have also contributed to our understanding of fertilization,
cell cycle control, self-recognition, metamorphosis, and regeneration. In this chapter we provide basic
protocols routinely used at the marine station in Villefranche-sur-Mer using the cosmopolitan species of
reference Ciona intestinalis and the European species Phallusia mammillata. These two models present
complementary advantages with regard to molecular, functional, and imaging approaches. We describe
techniques for basic culture of embryos, micro-injection, in vivo labelling, micro-manipulations, fixation,
and immuno-labelling. These methods allow analysis of calcium signals, reorganizations of cytoplasmic
and cortical domains, meiotic and mitotic cell cycle and cleavages as well as the roles of specific genes and
cellular interactions. Ascidians eggs and embryos are also an ideal material to isolate cortical fragments
and to isolate and re-associate individual blastomeres. We detail the experimental manipulations which
we have used to understand the structure and role of the egg cortex and of specific blastomeres during
development.
Key words: Ascidians, eggs, embryos, isolated cortex, methods, micro-injections, in vivo labelling,
imaging, micro-manipulations, immuno-labelling.
F.J. Pelegri (ed.), Vertebrate Embryogenesis, Methods in Molecular Biology 770,
DOI 10.1007/978-1-61779-210-6_14, © Springer Science+Business Media, LLC 2011
365
366 Sardet et al.
1. Introduction
The European tradition of studying tunicate embryos (ascidi-
ans and appendicularians) started with Kowalevsky in 1866 (1)
and Fol in 1879 (2) who discovered that these marine inverte-
brates (Fig. 14.1a,d) developed from a simple tadpole larvae
(Fig. 14.1g,h) which represented a greatly simplified chordate
body plan. The first experimental manipulations separating blas-
Fig. 14.1. (continued) network (
red
) and incubated in DiO-C2(3) to label mitochondria (
green
). (I) Montage of the two
fluorescent channels from an egg, spliced together along the animal, vegetal axes (confocal section). Note the sub-
cortical layer rich in mitochondria (Mito) and poor in ER (
arrows
) in the vegetal hemisphere; from Prodon et al. (33). (J)16
cell stage embryo,
arrows
show the myoplasm in the smaller posterior-most (P) blastomeres. (K) Ascidian egg fertilization
calcium wave: the wave of elevated calcium (Ca2+,
red
) starts from the point of sperm entry (
arrow
) and propagates
through the fertilized egg. Confocal section of an egg injected with Calcium-Green dextran. (L)
Phallusia
egg injected with
two synthetic mRNAs: one coding for a histone (RFP fusion, in
red
) and the other for a nuclear and kinetochore marker
(Venus fusion, in
green
). The injected egg was then fertilized. The image shows a 4 h post-fertilization gastrula stage
embryo with nuclear (
arrows
) and mitotic chromosomes plus kinetochores (
arrowheads
) labelling. (M) Ascidian embryo
injected with mRNA encoding EGFP at the 1 cell stage (
upper
embryo) and at the 2 cell stage (one blastomere which
gives rise to a half-labelled embryo,
lower
embryo). (N)
Phallusia
egg fixed with formaldehyde 5 min post-fertilization
and labelled with rhodamine phalloidin (in
red
). Accumulations of actin microfilaments are observed in the vegetal (
v
)
contraction pole (
arrowheads
) and at the animal (
a
) pole corresponding to the position of the first meiotic spindle (
arrow
).
(O)
Phallusia
egg fixed with methanol 5 min post-fertilization and immuno-labelled for microtubules (MT, rhodamine-
coupled secondary antibody, in
red
) and mitochondria (Mito, Cy5-coupled secondary antibody, in
magenta
). DNA is
labelled with Hoechst (in
blue
). This view of the animal pole shows the meiotic spindle before polar body extrusion.
(P)
Phallusia
4 cell stage embryo fixed with methanol and immuno-labelled for aPKC and mitochondria. View of the
CAB region (
arrowheads
) showing accumulation of aPKC at the posterior pole. Primary antibody against aPKC is used
at 1/100 dilution and signal is amplified with biotin/streptavidin (coupled with fluorescein, in
green
). Mitochondria are
labelled with a secondary antibody coupled with Cy5 (in
magenta
). (Q)
Phallusia
4 cell stage embryo fixed with methanol
and immuno-labelled for aPKC.
Posterior view
showing aPKC enrichment in the CAB (
arrowheads
). Primary antibody
against aPKC is used at 1/500 dilution, and the signal is amplified with TSA (Alexa488, in
green
). (R)
Ciona
isolation/re-
association of blastomeres: indicated cells were isolated or co-isolated from 8 cell stage embryos and cultured until
control embryos reached the 110 cell stage. According to the cell lineage, at this developmental stage the A4.1 lineage
generates four notochord, four neural, three endoderm and one trunk lateral precursors. In the A4.1-derived partial
embryo (
left
), however, a notochord marker gene,
brachyury
, is expressed in eight cells (
arrow
), indicating an ectopic
formation of notochord precursors. In contrast, when A4.1 was co-isolated with a4.2 (
right
), the derived partial embryo
expresses
brachyury
in four cells (
arrow
), indicating that cellular interactions between A4.1 and a4.2 lineages repress
the formation of ectopic notochord fates. This cell isolation experiment resulted in identification of an Ephrin ligand,
which is expressed in a4.2-derived cells and acts as the signal to repress notochord fates.
See
Picco et al. (20). (S)
Phallusia
isolated cortices: low magnification view of a field of cortical fragments isolated from eggs and 8 cell stage
embryos (
arrowheads
: CAB). ER is labelled with CM-DiI-C16(3) (in
red
). (T)
Phallusia
cortical fragment isolated from an
egg (about 15 μm in diameter). The ER network (
arrowheads
) adhering to the plasma membrane is labelled with DiO-
C6(3) after fixation (in
green
). (U)
Phallusia
cortex isolated from an 8 cell stage embryo. ER labelled with DiO-C6(3) after
fixation (in
green
) accumulates in the CAB (
arrowheads
). (V)
Phallusia
cortex isolated from an 8 cell stage embryo. The
cortex was prepared in presence of EGTA and taxol, then fixed and immuno-labelled for microtubules (MT, Cy5-coupled
secondary antibody, in
magenta
) and aPKC (primary antibody used at 1/100 dilution). The aPKC signal was amplified with
the biotin/streptavidin system (fluorescein-coupled, in
green
). MT and aPKC are retained in the CAB (
arrowheads
) after
cortex isolation.
Embryological Methods in Ascidians: The Villefranche-sur-Mer Protocols 367
Fig. 14.1. Examples of labelled
Phallusia
and
Ciona
eggs and embryos. (A, B, C)
Phallusia mammillata
.(A) Adult animal
with siphons (
arrows
); (B) unfertilized egg with chorion (
arrows
); (C) dechorionated egg (diameter is about 110–120 μm).
(D, E, F)
Ciona intestinalis
.(D) Adult animal with siphons (
arrows
); (E) unfertilized egg with chorion (
arrows
); (F) dechori-
onated egg (diameter is about 120–130 μm). (G)Two
Phallusia
tadpoles whose development from fertilization has
been filmed in time lapse (DIC optics) for 10 h in a micro-chamber (see whole sequence on BioMarCell web site,
Note 1). (H)
Ciona
tadpole (16 h post-fertilization). (I, J)
Phallusia
eggs were injected with DiI-C16(3) to reveal the ER
368 Sardet et al.
tomeres of any embryos were performed by Chabry using the
ascidian Ascidiella aspersa (3). More than a century ago, Con-
klin proposed that “organ forming substances” were located in
peripheral regions of the ascidian egg and in particular that the
“myoplasm”, a sub-cortical domain (coloured yellow in Styela
partita) gave rise to tail muscle cells (4). Fifty years later Ital-
ian biologists (5) and more recently Japanese investigators (6–8)
showed through key ablation and transplantation experiments
that determinants of axis establishment and muscle cell differenti-
ation were situated in cortical and sub-cortical domains. Some of
these determinants have now been identified as localized maternal
mRNAs (9,10) like in the fly Drosophila,thetoadXenopus and
the jellyfish Clytia (11–13).
Recent molecular phylogeny studies suggest that ascidians
(urochordates) are the closest sister groups of vertebrates (14).
There is a sense that certain questions tackled on vertebrate mod-
els may be more easily addressed using the tadpole of ascidians,
a relatively simple assemblage of approximately 3,000 cells whose
lineages are well documented. A small set of precursor cells spec-
ified between the 16- and 110 cell stages generates the six tis-
sues and a population of primordial germ cells making up the
tadpole (8,15,16). Ascidians are particularly attractive to study
the so-called mosaic type of development, maternal determinant
segregation, and cell and tissue differentiation in a simple tad-
pole. They are also used to address questions of self-recognition,
metamorphosis and regeneration (7,17). In addition to parti-
tioning maternal determinants, the stereotyped cell division pat-
terns have enabled researchers to rapidly identify the inductive
interactions that take place between blastomeres. The signalling
pathways and gene networks involved in these cellular interactions
are being unravelled using sophisticated micro-manipulation and
gene-based strategies (18–20).
Five ascidian species Ciona intestinalis, Ciona savignyi, Phal-
lusia mammillata, Halocynthia roretzi, Botryllus schlosseri and
the larvacean Oikopleura dioica have become prominent models
for research (21). A dynamic and growing scientific community
(about 500 people), which meets every 2 years (International
Tunicate Meetings), contributes to the development and
propagation of the urochordate model systems (21,22). Many
tools and approaches have been developed for the cosmopolitan
species of reference C. intestinalis: a sequenced genome which
is small and non-duplicated (about 160 Mb and 15,000 genes)
(23), micro-manipulations and injection of synthetic mRNAs
(24), introduction of plasmids by electroporation (25), gene
silencing using morpholino oligo-nucleotides (26), the recent
mastering of culture, transgenesis as well as successes with RNAi
approaches (27–31), and excellent databases (see Note 1). Some
of these tools are becoming available for the other ascidian
model species which present advantages complementary to those
Embryological Methods in Ascidians: The Villefranche-sur-Mer Protocols 369
of C. intestinalis. Eggs and embryos of P. mammillata are
remarkably transparent and are well suited for live imaging and
early expression of exogenous mRNA (32–35). Cell lineages and
morphogenetic events can be easily observed from egg to tadpole
using specific labelling methods, observation chambers and time-
lapse imaging stations. The larger (280 μm) eggs and embryos
of H. roretzi are the best suited for micro-manipulations (36).
Finally C. savignyi is useful for comparison of gene regulatory
sequences with C. intestinalis (37,38). This diversity of available
models is suited to evo-devo studies of genes and molecular and
cellular mechanisms (19,39).
There are several useful resources for those who may con-
sider working with ascidians. Noriyuki Satoh’s classical book
“Developmental Biology of Ascidians” remains the reference (7).
Recent advances in the ascidian field are presented in special issues
(17), International Tunicate Meetings reports (32) or reviews
(16,40–42). The Tunicate portal web site regroups a large
amount of information about leading laboratories and resources
(see Note 1). Time tables of development, digitized representa-
tions, and videos of C. intestinalis embryos are available on the
ANISEED and FABA sites (see Note 1). Videos of fertilization
and development of P. mammillata can be downloaded from
our BioMarCell and BioDev web sites (see Note 1). Concerning
methods, a chapter by B.J. Swalla in Methods in Cell Biology gives a
phylogenetic description of urochordates as well as basic methods
of culture, fertilization, etc. (43) and a chapter by W. Smith in this
issue of Methods in Molecular Biology covers genetic approaches in
ascidians. A list of methods for labelling marine embryos can be
found in the Center for Cell Dynamics (Friday Harbor, USA) web
site (see Note 1). A recent Cold Sping Harbor protocole series
also covers many aspects of experimentation with Ciona.
In this chapter, we present the basic protocols used
at the Villefranche-sur-Mer marine station (“Observatoire
Océanologique de Villefranche-sur-Mer”) by members of the
Developmental Biology research unit. Three groups in this
department (McDougall, Sardet, Yasuo) work on ascidians as
their main experimental models (C. intestinalis and P. mammil-
lata). Here we detail most basic techniques of ascidian culture,
embryology, and cell biology, except for in situ hybridization (see
Note 2) which is described in a separate volume of Methods in
Molecular Biology devoted to mRNA visualization (44).
2. Materials
2.1. Fertilization and
Culture of Ascidian
Embryos
1. Animals: ascidians are sessile marine animals easy to collect
from docks. The ascidian P. mammillata (termed Phallusia,
370 Sardet et al.
Fig. 14.1a–c) can be obtained all year long on the Mediter-
ranean and Atlantic coasts while C. intestinalis (termed
Ciona,Fig. 14.1d–f) can be collected in many temperate
regions of the world. Both species can be maintained in
aquaria at appropriate temperatures (16–18◦CforCiona,
18–22◦CforPhallusia). There are institutional suppliers
such as the Ascidian Stock Center at UC Santa Barbara
(see Note 1), USA, or the Station Biologique de Roscoff,
France. Ciona, which has marked reproductive periods in
the wild, has been successfully cultivated through several
generations in Japan, USA and Europe (31,45). Phallu-
sia gives abundant gametes throughout the year but the
quality of embryonic development is best in spring and fall.
They can be kept gravid in aquaria for several months under
constant light when fed artemia and micro-plankton.
2. Sea water (SW): natural SW is sterilized with a large volume
0.2 μm filter unit. Natural SW can be replaced by ASW
and/or supplemented with TAPS buffer and/or BSA (see
below).
3. Artificial sea water (ASW): 420 mM NaCl, 9 mM KCl,
10 mM CaCl2, 24.5 mM MgCl2, 25.5 mM MgSO4,
2.15 mM NaHCO3and 10 mM Hepes buffer, pH 8.0.
Sterilize with a 0.2 μm filter and add 0.05 g/L kanamycin
sulphate. It can be stored at 4◦C for several days. Note that
Ciona development is sensitive to the SW quality and may
be better with ASW.
4. TAPS buffer stock solution: 500 mM N-tris
(hydroxymethyl)methyl-3-aminopropanesulphonic acid,
pH 8.2. Store at room temperature (RT).
5. TAPS-SW, EDTA-SW and BSA-SW: although filtered nat-
ural SW or ASW works well, adding TAPS buffer at a con-
centration of 10 mM final or/and 1 mM EDTA can some-
times increase the quality of embryonic development for
certain batches. Some batches of embryos can also be very
sticky, in which case adding bovine serum albumin (BSA)
at a concentration of 0.1% is helpful (rinse with SW before
fixation).
6. 10×trypsin stock solution: 1% trypsin in SW and 100 mM
TAPS, pH 8.2. Store at –20◦C in 1 mL aliquots.
7. 1×Pronase/thioglycolate solution: 0.05% pronase and 1%
thioglycolate in SW. Can be kept at 4◦C and used for 1
week. For longer storage, aliquots of 20×stock solution
(1% pronase, 20% thioglycolate) can be kept at –20◦C.
8. GF (gelatin/formaldehyde): dissolve gelatin and
paraformaldehyde each at a concentration of 0.1% in
Embryological Methods in Ascidians: The Villefranche-sur-Mer Protocols 371
distilled water by heating them under a fume hood at 60◦C
for 1 h. Store in 50 mL aliquots at 4◦C.
9. Non-sticky coated dishes and glassware for Phallusia.To
coat plastic or glass surfaces, wet with a thin layer of GF,
dry, and rinse well in distilled water. After use, GF-coated
dishes can be rinsed with tap water, stored at RT and
re-used several times. Pasteur pipettes or glass capillaries
should be similarly coated by passing GF through them a
few times, allowed to dry and then rinsed.
10. Non-sticky coated dishes and glassware for Ciona:GFis
not as effective at preventing sticking of Ciona eggs and
embryos. It is therefore best to use agarose-coated dishes.
Heat 1% agarose in SW and pour in dishes to make a thin
(2 mm) layer, leave to cool and rinse in SW. For storage
(up to a week), add ASW to agarose dishes and store wet at
4◦C. New glassware should be soaked in tap water for 1–2
days (no detergent) to reduce stickiness. With use, pipettes
and tubes become coated with egg debris which also pre-
vents dechorionated eggs from sticking.
11. Micro-pipettes for handling eggs: a glass tube (outer diam-
eter 5 mm; inner diameter 3 mm) is pulled under flame, so
that one end becomes tapered to around 1 mm in diameter.
To the large end, attach a rubber tube with its other end
stapled (Fig. 14.2b). For pipetting very small volumes, pull
a coated capillary tube (10–50 μL) under a flame to the
desired diameter (just over the width of an egg) and attach
it to an adaptor (Fisher Scientific 4,356 M) 30 cm long
tube fitted with a mouth piece (suction by mouth pipette)
or to a stapled tube as above (suction by hand pressure).
Coated plastic tips for mechanical pipettes (200 μL yellow
tip, small opening >200 μm diameter) may also be used.
12. GF-coated glass slides and cover-slips: apply thin layer of
GF solution (about 50 μLforaslide,20μLforacover-
slip), dry then wash in distilled water.
13. Vaseline (local supermarket) and silicone grease (Dow
Corning high vacuum grease): fill a syringe equipped with
a plastic yellow tip with the grease.
14. Paper frame chamber for live imaging: this method is
best for long-term observation and time-lapse acquisi-
tions; it ensures excellent exchange of gasses (O2/CO2)
and can even sustain development through metamorpho-
sis (3–5 days after fertilization). Prepare small paper frames
(18 mm ×18 mm) to fit under cover-slips (22 ×22, #1).
Use lens cleaning paper or tissue paper which when wet
will reach a thickness close to that of eggs and embryos:
120–150 μm. Deposit a paper frame on a coated slide and
372 Sardet et al.
Fig. 14.2. Micro-injection setup. (A–D) Stereo-microscope setup/(E–I) inverted microscope setup. (A) Enlarged view
of the manipulator assembly. The needle holder is connected to the glass syringe using the following Bio-Rad prod-
ucts: 1/16 OD post-pump fittings and double Luer tubing adaptor. (B) Micro-pipette. (C) Mineral oil needle filler.
Embryological Methods in Ascidians: The Villefranche-sur-Mer Protocols 373
surround with a thin line of vaseline or silicone grease
extruded from the syringe, drawn as a square (slightly
smaller than the cover-slip). Deposit a tiny drop of SW with
a few eggs or embryos in the centre of the frame. Pipette
30–50 μL SW onto paper frame. Cover with a coated
cover-slip. Press delicately on the cover-slip to make sure
there is a good seal all around and that eggs or embryos
are just held in place in the micro-drop between coated
slide and cover-slip. There should be an air space between
the drop of SW and the moistened paper frame.
15. Vaseline/silicone chamber for live imaging: suitable for
frequent or short-term observations (up to a few hours).
Using the syringe, extrude two parallel lines of vaseline (or
silicone) grease on a GF-coated slide. Place the embryos
in a drop of SW (about 20 μL) on the slide. Cover with
a GF-coated cover-slip, and gently flatten the grease lines
with forceps until the embryo is slightly compressed such
that it no longer moves when the cover-slip is tapped deli-
cately. Fill the rest of the space between slide and cover-slip
with SW placed on the side of the cover-slip, again check-
ing that the embryos remain snug. This chamber can be
perfused with solutions (for example, activated sperm to
fertilize the eggs or a chemical inhibitor) or can be sealed
with vaseline (or silicone) grease to prevent evaporation.
2.2. Injection of Eggs
and Embryos
1. Set up on stereo-microscope/injecting from above: this is
the most common way of injecting large numbers of eggs
or embryos using a needle located above a line of eggs or
embryos and approaching them at an angle (Fig. 14.2a–d).
We use the following equipment: Leica S8APO stereo-
microscope with Leica TL BFDF (brightfield–darkfield
transmitted light base), Narishige MMO-203, three-axis oil
hydraulic micro-manipulator, Narishige M-152 manipulator,
Narishige GJ-1 magnetic stand, Narishige IMH1 injection
holder assembly, glass syringe with a male Luer-Lock con-
nection fitting, iron plate. For making injection chamber:
Fig. 14.2. (continued) A hand-pulled capillary is connected, via a Teflon tube, to a needle attached to a 2 mL plastic
syringe. (D) Agarose injection chamber. Schematics showing: (1) how to make a mould for injection chamber; (2)how
to place the mould; (3) how to align ascidian eggs in the chamber. (E) The wedge injection chamber mounted on the
stage of an inverted IX70 Olympus microscope with micro-injection needle, three-way micro-manipulator and injection
box shown. (F) Close up of the wedge injection chamber with micro-injection needle horizontal to the stage. (G)Close
up of the wedge injection chamber with the wedge and filling tube visible. (H) Schematic showing the wedge injection
chamber with the wedge and filling tube highlighted. In this example mRNA has been loaded into the filling tube. (I)Close
up of the injection showing the needle filled with injection solution being inserted into an egg held in place in the wedge.
374 Sardet et al.
1.5% agarose in SW, plastic Petri dishes (5 cm diameter),
cover-slip (#1), plastic block (about 15 mm ×15 mm ×
5 mm), double face tape.
2. Setup on inverted microscope/horizontal “wedge” method:
detailed articles have been published on this method (46)
(Fig. 14.2e–i). We use the following equipment: an inverted
Olympus IX70 microscope with stage control on the left to
free the right hand for the micro-manipulator, MHO-103
three-axis oil micro-manipulator (Narishige, now the MMO
series), type-A stage-side mounting system (mounted on the
right-hand side) with a NR adaptor pillar, H1-7 type injec-
tion needle holder (IMH1 set with Teflon tubing and con-
nector) connected to a B-8B ball joint connector, a silent
air compressor (local supermarket) connected to a Narishige
IM300 (we use about 60–70 psi air pressure from the com-
pressor). Plexiglass stage mounting chambers are made by
our workshop. For making wedge injection chamber, use
GF-coated cover-slips (#1, 22 mm ×22 mm).
3. Morpholinos are purchased from Gene Tools. They are
resuspended at 2 mM in distilled water and stored in
aliquots at –80◦C (note that the manufacturer recently rec-
ommended storing morpholino at RT).
4. Synthetic mRNAs are prepared as concentrated solutions
(1–2 μg/μL) in distilled water and small aliquots are frozen
at –80◦C. We routinely use the vectors pRN3 (47)or
its derivative pSPE3 (48) to synthesize mRNA for micro-
injection. For pRN3, the ORF of the gene of interest is PCR
amplified such that it can be cloned directionally into the
multi-cloning sequence at BglII, EcoRI and NotI restric-
tion sites. For pSPE3, the ORF of interest is first cloned
into a Gateway entry vector (pENTR/D-TOPO) and then
inserted into the destination vector using recombination
cloning technology (Invitrogen). Both pRN3 and pSPE3
constructs are linearized with SfiI restriction enzyme and
used as a template for in vitro mRNA synthesis using T3
mMESSAGE MACHINE kit (Ambion). The vector pCS2+
(49) can also be used for mRNA synthesis, but the resulting
mRNAs must be additionally polyadenylated using a Poly
(A) Tailing Kit (Ambion) for efficient translation in ascidian
embryos.
5. Fast Green (Sigma-Aldrich): 1 mg/mL in distilled water (2×
stock).
6. Fluorescent dextrans, 10 kDa molecular weight (Texas-Red-
coupled, fluorescein-coupled, rhodamine-coupled; Molecu-
lar Probes): 2 mM in distilled water (2×stock).
Embryological Methods in Ascidians: The Villefranche-sur-Mer Protocols 375
2.3. In Vivo Labelling
of Eggs and Embryos
1. DiO-C2(3) (Molecular Probes): a 1,000×stock solution
is made at 5 mg/mL in ethanol and kept at 4◦C. Observe
with fluorescein filter set.
2. MitoTracker (Molecular Probes). We have successfully used
MitoTracker Red FM, MitoTracker Green FM and Mito-
Tracker Red CM-H2XRos. For each of these, a 1,000×
stock solution is made at 1 mM in DMSO and stored at
–20◦C.
3. Rhodamine 123 (Molecular Probes): a 1,000×stock solu-
tion is made at 1 mg/mL in ethanol and kept at 4◦C.
Observe with fluorescein filter set.
4. TMRM and TMRE (Molecular Probes): a 1,000×stock
solution is made at 1 mM in ethanol and kept at 4◦C.
Observe with rhodamine filter set.
5. Hoechst 33342: powder is dissolved in distilled water at
a concentration of 10 mg/mL and stored in aliquots at
–20◦C. An aliquot is diluted 1/50 (200 μg/mL) in dis-
tilled water and stored for several months at 4◦Casa
400×stock solution for in vivo labelling of chromosomes.
Observe with UV filter set.
6. Calcium-Green dextran, 10 kDa molecular weight (Molec-
ular Probes): dissolve in injection buffer (180 mM KCl,
100 μM EGTA, 30 mM BES buffer, pH 7.1) at a concen-
tration of 10 mM. Observe with fluorescein filter set.
7. Fura-2 dextran, 10 kDa molecular weight (Molecular
Probes): dissolve as for Calcium-Green dextran. Observe
with Fura-2 filter set (an excitation filter wheel is required).
8. DiI-C16(3) (1,1-dioctadecyl-3,3,3;3-tetramethylindo-
carbocyanine perchlorate; Molecular Probes). For injection
and endoplasmic reticulum (ER) labelling, a saturated
solution of Dil is made by mixing several crystals of Dil in
100 μL of soybean oil (Wesson oil). For plasma membrane
labelling, make a 2.5 mg/mL stock solution in ethanol
and store at –20◦C. Observe with rhodamine filter set.
9. Succinylated concanavalin A, Alexa488 conjugate (Molec-
ular Probes): a 1,000×stock solution is made at 5 mg/mL
in 0.1 M sodium bicarbonate pH 8.3, aliquoted and stored
at –20◦C. Observe with fluorescein filter set.
10. FM 4-64 lipophilic dye (Molecular Probes): a stock solu-
tion is made at 10 mg/mL in DMSO, aliquoted and stored
at –20◦C. Observe with rhodamine filter set.
11. FITC: fluorescein isothiocyanate (Molecular Probes).
Make 100×stock solution by dissolving FITC in DMSO
at 10 mg/mL. Store at –20◦C. Observe with fluorescein
filter set.
376 Sardet et al.
12. Syto12 (Molecular Probes): 5 mM solution in DMSO.
Store at –20◦C. Observe with fluorescein filter set.
13. Nile Blue powder (Merck).
2.4. Blastomere
Isolations and
Ablations
1. Glass needle/knife: the tapered part of a Pasteur pipette is
pulled under flame to create a very thin string of glass, which
should be like a wool fibre. When first using a new glass
embryo knife it is necessary to coat the knife to prevent stick-
ing. This is done by smashing an egg or embryo and pulling
the knife back and forth through the cellular debris.
2. 1.5% agarose-coated Petri dishes: make them like 1% agarose
dishes (Section 2.1).
3. EMC (or calcium-free artificial sea water): 480 mM NaCl,
9.4 mM KCl and 23.6 mM EGTA. Equilibrate pH to 8.0
with NaOH, autoclave and store at RT.
2.5. Fixing and
Immuno-labelling
Eggs and Embryos
1. PBS solution: make a standard 10×PBS solution (1.37 M
NaCl, 26.8 mM KCl, 100 mM Na2HPO4, 17.6 mM
KH2PO4, pH 7.5), autoclave and store at RT. Dilute in dis-
tilled water to prepare 50 mL of 1×PBS solution (termed
PBS) which can be stored for use at 4◦C for 1–3 days.
2. 20% formaldehyde stock solution: dissolve 10 g of
paraformaldehyde powder in 50 mL of distilled water and
add 80 μL of 10 N NaOH. Keep at 50◦C overnight
(ON) and mix until completely dissolved. Pass through
a0.4μm filter and store in aliquots at –20◦C. To thaw,
aliquots must be warmed at 50◦C for 1 h. For conve-
nience, formaldehyde solution can also be purchased com-
mercially (32% stock solution without methanol, Electron
Microscopy Sciences).
3. Formaldehyde fixative: dilute the formaldehyde stock solu-
tion to 4% in PBS, add NaCl to 0.5 M. Store at 4◦Cfor
1 month maximum in 1.3 mL aliquots in screw cap tubes;
for longer storage, keep at –20◦C.
4. Methanol fixative: 90% methanol and 50 mM EGTA, pH
7.5. Store at –20◦C in 1.3 mL aliquots in screw cap tubes.
5. PBS-Tween solution (PBS-Tw): add Tween20 to PBS at a
final concentration of 0.1%. Store at 4◦C for 1–3 days.
6. PBS-Triton solution (PBS-Tr): add TritonX100 to PBS at
a final concentration of 0.1%. Store at 4◦C for 1–3 days.
7. PBS-Tw-BSA: add Tween20 and BSA at final concentra-
tions of 0.1 and 0.5%, respectively, in PBS.
8. PBS-BSA: dissolve BSA in PBS at a final concentration of
1%. Store at –20◦C in aliquots.
9. Primary antibodies: antibodies are aliquoted and stored
at –80◦C. Once thawed, aliquots can be kept at 4◦Cfor
Embryological Methods in Ascidians: The Villefranche-sur-Mer Protocols 377
months (see Note 3). In the example given in Sections 3.5
and 3.6, we use an antibody which labels aPKC (rabbit
polyclonal sc216 from Santa Cruz Biotechnology) at a
working dilution ranging from 1/100 (with fluorescently
coupled secondary antibody or biotin/streptavidin ampli-
fication) to 1/500 (with TSA method), the NN18 anti-
body (mouse monoclonal N5264 from Sigma-Aldrich, see
Note 4) which labels mitochondria at a working dilution of
1/400 and anti-tubulin antibody YL1/2 (rat monoclonal
ab6160 from Abcam) at a working dilution of 1/500.
10. Secondary antibodies: fluorescently labelled secondary
antibodies raised in goat against rabbit, mouse and rat
immunoglobulin are purchased from Jackson Immuno
Research laboratories. Antibodies against rabbit are pre-
absorbed by the manufacturer against human serum pro-
teins, whereas antibodies against mouse and rat are also
pre-absorbed against related species (rat for antibody
against mouse and inversely). All antibodies are reconsti-
tuted at the concentration recommended by the manu-
facturer. We add an equal volume of pure glycerol for
cryo-protection and store the antibodies as small aliquots
at –80◦C. Once thawed, working aliquots can be kept at
4◦C for several months (see Note 3). In the examples pro-
vided in the method (Sections 3.5 and 3.6)weusea
Cy5-conjugated goat anti-mouse, and rhodamine or Cy5-
conjugated goat anti-rat, each at a 1/100 dilution.
11. Biotin-conjugated antibodies and fluorescent streptavidin:
purchased from Jackson Immuno Research laboratories
and handled like fluorescently labelled secondary antibod-
ies (see above). In the example provided in Sections 3.5
and 3.6, we used a biotin-conjugated goat anti-rabbit at
1/200 dilution and a fluorescein-conjugated streptavidin
at 1/100 dilution.
12. HRP-coupled antibodies and TSA kits (Molecular Probes).
In the example provided in Section 3.5, we use an HRP-
conjugated goat anti-rabbit at 1/100 dilution. We recom-
mend the Alexa488-TSA kit, which gives very strong green
fluorescence labelling without background (for TSA kits
using other fluorophores or haptens, see Note 5).
13. Fluorescent phalloidins (Sigma-Aldrich or Molecular
Probes): reconstituted at a concentration of 50 μg/mL
(approx. 35 μM, 1 unit/μL) in DMSO (see Note 6)and
stored in aliquots at –20◦C. If the fluorescent phalloidin
is provided in methanol, the methanol must first be elim-
inated by evaporation (keep vial opened for a few days at
RT in a dark chamber) before reconstituting in DMSO.
378 Sardet et al.
Once thawed, use phalloidin at a dilution of 1/100 and
store the working aliquot at 4◦C. In the examples provided
(Sections 3.5 and 3.6), we used rhodamine–phalloidin.
14. Hoechst 33342: Use 200 μg/mL working aliquot as a
100×stock solution for chromosome labelling on fixed
samples (Section 2.3).
15. Citifluor AF1 antifade mounting medium (Electron
Microscopy Sciences). Store at –20◦C in aliquots. Once
thawed, store the working aliquot at 4◦C.
2.6. Isolated
Cortices:
Preparation,
Labelling and
Imaging
1. Glass cover-slips (18 mm ×18 mm, #1) successively cleaned
with 10% Tween20, distilled water and ethanol. Keep them
dry on parafilm in closed Petri dishes.
2. EMC (Section 2.4).
3. Buffer X: 350 mM K-aspartate, 130 mM taurine, 170 mM
betaine, 50 mM glycine, 19 mM MgCl2and 10 mM Hepes
buffer. Equilibrate pH at 7.0 with KOH. Sterilize with
0.2 μm filter and store at –20◦C in 10 mL aliquots.
4. CIM solution: 800 mM glucose, 100 mM KCl, 2 mM
MgCl2, 5 mM EGTA and 10 mM MOPS buffer. Equilibrate
pH at 7.0 with KOH. Sterilize with 0.2 μm filter and store
at –20◦C in 10 mL aliquots.
5. CIM fixative: add 3.7% formaldehyde (without methanol
trace, Section 2.5) and 0.1% glutaraldehyde to CIM solu-
tion just before use.
6. CM-DiI-C16(3) (“Fixable DiI”; Molecular Probes). Add 20
μL ethanol to a vial of fixable DiI. This 2.5 mg/mL stock
solution can be stored at 4◦C for several days. Observe with
a rhodamine filter set.
7. DiO-C6(3) (Molecular Probes). This dye labels all mem-
branes including the ER network, the plasma membrane,
and occasional vesicles and mitochondria in preparations
of living or fixed isolated cortices. A stock solution at
0.2 mg/mL in ethanol is stable and can be stored at 4◦C
for several years. Observe with a fluorescein filter set.
3. Methods
3.1. Fertilization and
Culture of Ascidian
Embryos
3.1.1. Obtaining
Gametes
1. Dissect the hermaphroditic animals by cutting through their
tunics between the siphons and peel away the tunic (50).
2. Pierce the overlying oviduct and collect the eggs using plas-
tic or glass pipettes, massaging the oviduct to empty all the
eggs. Deposit the eggs in SW and store them at the appropri-
ate temperature (16◦CforCiona and 18◦CforPhallusia).
Embryological Methods in Ascidians: The Villefranche-sur-Mer Protocols 379
3. Then collect sperm from the underlying spermiduct using
a pipette or a needle and syringe. Concentrated sperm can
be stored several days at 4◦C in small plastic tubes. Phallu-
sia eggs can be efficiently fertilized by sperm from the same
individual (therefore one should take care not to contam-
inate eggs with sperm while collecting gametes), whereas
self-fertilization is inefficient in Ciona, so it is necessary to
open at least two animals.
4. It is also possible to obtain immature oocytes from ovary
tissue in order to study oocyte maturation and polarity. We
have analysed this process for Ciona (50).
3.1.2. Egg
Dechorionation
Ascidian eggs are surrounded by a chorion layer containing test
cells and follicle cells (Fig. 14.1b,e) which should be removed
for observation and subsequent experimental procedures (unless
one wants to observe tadpoles, which emerge from the chorion
by hatching). After dechorionation (Fig. 14.1c,f), eggs and
embryos tend to stick, so they should be handled gently and trans-
ferred with large diameter plastic pipettes or coated glass pipettes
into dishes which are specially coated. For transferring a small
number of eggs or embryos, we use hand-held micro-pipettes.
1. For Phallusia:add1mL10×trypsin stock solution to
9 mL chorionated eggs in SW, add 250 μL of 500 mM
TAPS buffer and shake or rotate gently (20 rpm) for 2–4 h
at 18–22◦C(51). Eggs can also be treated briefly with
pronase/thioglycolate (as for Ciona) if test cells are not
completely removed.
When most eggs have a smooth surface (Fig. 14.1c)and
settle to the bottom of the dish, wash several times with
SW by swirling eggs to the centre of the dish with a gen-
tle wrist motion. The chorion debris, dead cells and chori-
onated eggs will float and can be removed with vacuum
aspiration.
Transfer dechorionated eggs to a GF-coated Petri dishes
(5 or 10 cm diameter) at a low density, so that they are not
touching.
Eggs can be kept at 18◦C for several hours or up to a day,
awaiting fertilization, injection or fixation.
2. For Ciona: add 250 μLof1NNaOHto10mLof
1×pronase/thioglycolate solution and mix well. Then add
250 μL more of 1 N NaOH followed by mixing (pH will
rise to around 10). Adding NaOH creates white precipitates
which should vanish once the solution is mixed.
Transfer chorionated eggs (about 5 mL) to a 15 mL glass
test tube (with use these tubes become coated with debris
which prevents sticking, so we simply rinse in tap water—no
detergent—and re-use the same glass tubes).
380 Sardet et al.
Add 1 mL of the basic pronase/thioglycolate solution to
the glass tube containing chorionated eggs. Mix well by
gentle pipetting. Wait 5 min or so until eggs sediment to
the bottom of the tube. Remove as much supernatant as
possible.
Add remaining volume of the basic pronase/thioglycolate
solution to the packed chorionated eggs and mix with gentle
pipetting. Within 2–3 min, chorions should start to dissolve.
Check occasionally under a stereo-microscope, and once the
majority (2/3) eggs lose their chorion (Fig. 14.1f), gently
add SW to fill the glass tube.
Wait for dechorionated eggs to settle to the bottom
(dechorionated eggs sediment quickly) and remove super-
natant. Gently add fresh SW and repeat the washing proce-
dure three times.
Transfer eggs to agarose-coated Petri dishes (5 or 10 cm
diameter) and place at 16◦C.
Eggs can be kept for several hours or up to a day, awaiting
fertilization, injection or fixation.
3.1.3. Sperm Activation
If one wishes to fertilize eggs rapidly and synchronously, it is best
to first activate sperm and test the different sperm batches individ-
ually for their ability to fertilize (52). If synchrony is not impor-
tant, one can simply add concentrated sperm to eggs in SW at a
dilution of 1/1,000 and most eggs will become fertilized over a
period of 10–30 min.
1. Activation by exposure to chorionated eggs: add 25 μLof
concentrated sperm to 5 mL SW containing 100 μL chori-
onated eggs; shake gently (20 rpm) for 15–60 min. Let
chorionated eggs sediment to the bottom of the tube; the
activated sperm suspension can be kept at 4◦C and used to
fertilize for several hours.
2. Activation by alkaline SW (with NaOH): dilute 10 μLof
concentrated sperm in 2 mL of SW and then add 4–12 μL
of 1 N NaOH. Wait 1 min and add the activated sperm to
eggs. You have to find the right concentration of NaOH
(usually 8 μL work well). This activation works very well
with Phallusia sperm but should be done each time, just
before fertilization.
3. Activation by alkaline SW (with Tris–HCl buffer): this is the
preferred method for Ciona. Add 25 μLof1MTris–HCl
buffer (pH 9.5) to 0.5 mL of SW. To this alkaline SW, add
2.5 μL of concentrated sperm; mix and wait 1 min before
fertilizing.
3.1.4. Fertilization and
Culture of Embryos
Similar methods are used to fertilize Phallusia and Ciona eggs.
Embryological Methods in Ascidians: The Villefranche-sur-Mer Protocols 381
1. For Phallusia: to fertilize eggs in a synchronous manner, add
2 mL of activated sperm to 10 mL of dechorionated eggs in
SW. Mix well. You can judge if synchronous fertilization has
been achieved by observing egg shape change: 80% of the
eggs should lose their roundness and become pear shaped
within 5 min of sperm addition.
Once eggs are fertilized, wash extensively with SW and
culture the embryos at 18–22◦C, either spread in a mono-
layer (but not touching) in appropriately sized coated Petri
dishes or keep as a suspension in a GF-coated beaker
equipped with a paddle rotating at 50 rpm. For Phallusia
maintained around 20◦C, first cleavage takes place about
50 min after fertilization, gastrulation after 3 h and the
embryo develops into a tadpole in 12 h. To see fertilization
and development of Phallusia consult the BioMarCell film
archive (see Note 1).
2. For Ciona: to fertilize eggs in a synchronous manner, add
500 μL of sperm activated with alkaline SW to 10 mL of
dechorionated eggs in SW. Mix well. With an appropriate
stereo-microscope, one can see active sperm moving around
eggs. Eggs start to spin and, when fertilized, become pear
shaped.
After 10 min incubation, transfer eggs to another agarose-
coated Petri dish containing SW and culture them at
16–18◦C. Information on Ciona embryonic stages, mor-
phology and cell lineages can be found on FABA and
ANISEED databases (see Note 1).
3.1.5. Mounting Live
Embryos for Imaging
Live ascidian eggs and embryos can be placed in glass bottom
dishes (MatTek corporation) first coated with GF or cellular
debris for observation with an inverted microscope. For improved
optics on inverted or upright microscopes, we routinely mount
live Phallusia eggs and embryos on coated slides using two types
of observation chambers (paper frame chamber or vaseline cham-
ber, Section 2.1). Live Ciona eggs and embryos can be similarly
imaged for brief periods on GF-coated slides or on slides which
have been licked to make them less sticky. During the time when
slides are not being imaged, they should be kept in humid cham-
bers made by placing wet paper towels inside appropriately sized
plastic boxes or Petri dishes.
3.2. Injection of Eggs
and Embryos
Two different set ups are routinely used in our laboratory and
are somewhat complementary being more or less convenient
for functional or imaging studies. One is based on a stereo-
microscope with the needle at an angle, while the other is
based on an inverted microscope with the needle horizontal
(Fig. 14.2).
382 Sardet et al.
3.2.1. Injection Using
the Stereo-microscope
Setup
This injection method (Fig. 14.2a–d) is suitable for injecting
large numbers of eggs and embryos, for instance, when they are
to be used for functional studies followed by in situ hybridization
or immuno-labelling.
1. Making the agarose injection chamber: a mould has to be
prepared, a cover-slip (#1, thickness similar to the diameter
of Ciona eggs: 120 μm) is stuck to a plastic block of about
15 mm ×15 mm ×5 mm on one of the largest surfaces
using double face tape. One end of the cover-slip should
protrude, ideally about 150 μm, from an edge of the plastic
block. Carefully bring 1.5% agarose-containing SW just to a
boil in a microwave oven. Pour the agarose SW into a plastic
Petri dish (5 cm diameter) and float the Petri dish on ice-
filled water.
Place the mould in the centre of the dish as shown in
Fig. 14.2d. Make sure that the cover glass does not touch
the bottom of the dish. Let the agarose harden for about
2 min. Carefully pull out the mould and cover the agarose
with SW.
The agarose injection chamber can be stored at 4◦Cand
be re-used for several injections.
Using a micro-pipette, align dechorionated eggs in the
well made with the protruding edge of the cover-slip of the
mould.
2. Loading the needle: the injection holder assembly is con-
nected to a glass syringe, via Teflon tubing which is filled
with mineral oil (make sure that there are no air bubbles in
any parts of this assembly).
Needles are made from glass capillaries containing a thin
glass filament (Harvard Apparatus GC100TF-10) using a
needle puller (we use a Narishige PN-30).
Needles are backfilled with about 0.5 μL of the solution
to inject (morpholino, mRNA, etc.) by depositing the injec-
tion solution on the open large end of the needle, so that
the solution will be transferred to the tip of needle along
the filament by capillary action. Gently tap the needle while
holding it upright to remove most of the air bubbles from
the injection solution (injections solutions may be coloured
using Fast Green).
Once the injection solution is transferred to the tip of
the needle, the needle should be filled completely with min-
eral oil using a hand-pulled capillary attached by tubing to a
syringe (Fig. 14.2c).
When the needle is inserted into the needle holder, spe-
cial care should be taken not to introduce air bubbles. Apart
from tiny air bubbles found in the injection solution, there
should be no air bubbles in mineral oil from the needle to
Embryological Methods in Ascidians: The Villefranche-sur-Mer Protocols 383
the glass syringe. It is also important that the barrel and pis-
ton parts of the glass syringe move very smoothly.
3. To start injecting, proceed in the following way: break the
tip of the needle by bringing it very slowly to a piece of
cover-slip placed at a slant in the injection chamber. This is a
critical step for successful injection. Make the opening of the
tip as tiny as possible. The syringe piston should be pressed
gently while the needle is brought towards the cover slip.
This allows one to visualise when the needle is broken as
small amounts of the coloured solution (Fast Green) in the
injection needle can be seen leaking into the chamber.
Place the tip of needle at the centre of egg and then
apply brief suction by pulling on the syringe piston, so that
a “hole” is made in the plasma membrane.
Press the piston gently to deliver injection solution into
the egg.
3.2.2. Injection Using
the Inverted Microscope
We use this method (Fig. 14.2e–i) for mRNA injection into Phal-
lusia eggs since it cuts down on the cost because 1 μLofmRNA
can be used repeatedly for approx. 1 month (stored at 4◦C in fill-
ing tubes, Fig. 14.2e). This method is also convenient for imag-
ing live eggs and embryos under a light or confocal microscope
while they are being injected or soon after (for example, to image
calcium signals).
1. Making a wedge injection chamber: cut coated cover-slips
into small pieces (approx. 4 mm ×10 mm) and attach to
whole coated cover-slips with VALAB (composed of 1:1:1
vaseline, lanolin and bees wax) and a spacer to elevate one
side of the wedge. The spacer is a cut piece of cover-slip
(Fig. 14.2h,i).
Heat on a hot plate until VALAB melts.
Remove from hot plate and allow VALAB to cool (approx.
30 s or when it turns opaque).
Carefully remove spacer with forceps (we keep spacers and
re-use them); this creates the wedge, a slanted coated-glass
sandwich.
Attach the wedge to a plexiglass mounting chambers using
silicone grease to seal on three sides and add dechorion-
ated eggs or embryos using a mouth pipette (up to 100
eggs/embryos per wedge).
Attach a second cover-slip to sandwich the wedge and fill
the reservoir with approx. 400 μLSW(Fig. 14.2h,i)(see
Note 7 for alternative wedge).
2. Loading the needle: first, make a filling tube to hold the
injection solution. Cut glass capillaries into pieces approx.
1 cm long. To one end add 0.5 μL mineral oil, then 0.5 μL
injection solution and again 0.5 μL mineral oil.
384 Sardet et al.
The filling tube is fixed to the underside of the wedge
using VALAB (Fig. 14.2h).
Needles are made from glass capillaries that do not contain
a thin glass filament (Harvard Apparatus GC100T-10) using
a needle puller (we use a Narishige PN-30).
The needle is inserted into the needle holder which is con-
nected to an IM300 injection box via Teflon tubing and
advanced towards the filling tube.
The needle is first broken carefully against the filling tube
then front-filled with about 1 nL of injection solution (Mor-
pholino, mRNA or fluorescent indicator) from a filling tube
(Fig. 14.2h) by brief suction (“fill” function, approx. 30
psi). Needles that fill too fast are discarded and those that fill
too slowly are broken again.
3. Injection: once the needle is filled with injection solution
the balance pressure is adjusted, so that the meniscus moves
slightly out towards the pipette tip.
Needles are inserted into the centre of the egg
(Fig. 14.2i) and suction is applied (Narishige “fill” func-
tion) to break the plasma membrane.
Eggs are injected at approx. 5–10 psi air pressure using
the foot pedal attached to the IM300.
Filling tubes containing injection solutions can be stored
at 4◦C and re-used for several weeks.
3.2.3. Gene Knockdown
with Morpholino
An aliquot of the morpholino to be injected is heated at 65◦C
for 10 min and made to the desired concentration with dis-
tilled water. A range (0.25–1.0 mM pipette concentration) is first
injected to determine which concentration is best suited for the
experiment. Prior to injection, the solution is spun in a micro-
centrifuge at maximum speed for 5 min to sediment particles that
might block the injection needle.
3.2.4. Injection of
mRNAs and Plasmid
DNA
Synthetic mRNAs are prepared as concentrated solutions (1–2
μg/μL) in distilled water and small aliquots are frozen at –80◦C.
Solutions are centrifuged in a micro-centrifuge at maximum speed
for 5 min prior to loading the needle or filling tube, in order
to sediment particles that might block the injection needle. For
injection, different concentrations are tested after dilution in dis-
tilled water, ranging from 0.25 to 2.0 μg/μL in the pipette; gen-
erally using the lower concentrations for functional studies and
the higher concentrations for visualization of fluorescent fusion
proteins (Fig. 14.1l,m). For Phallusia, fluorescence from fluo-
rescent protein constructs can be observed in an unfertilized egg
a few hours after injection of concentrated mRNAs. Expression
can be detected more rapidly in eggs that are fertilized, and flu-
orescent proteins continue to accumulate in dividing embryos.
Embryological Methods in Ascidians: The Villefranche-sur-Mer Protocols 385
For Ciona, unfertilized eggs do not translate exogenous mRNAs,
but expression of fluorescent protein constructs can be observed
few hours after fertilization (gastrula stage embryo) (35). Plasmid
DNA is treated in a similar fashion for micro-injection, but at a
lower concentration (generally 50 ng/μL).
3.2.5. Quantitation of
Injection
The final concentration of the injected solution in the egg will
be 1–10% of the pipette concentration depending on the injected
volume. Injection volume is estimated by the diameter of clearing
in the cytoplasm upon injection; this cleared space can be ren-
dered more visible by the addition of an equal volume of Fast
Green (0.5 mg/mL final) or fluorescent dextran (1 mM final) to
the morpholino or mRNA injection solution. Centrifugation to
clear the injection solution should be performed after the addi-
tion of these dyes. Typically, eggs are injected until 1/4 diameter
of egg is filled with the coloured solution. The injected amount
can be further quantified from the intensity of signal in the egg
using a fluorescence microscope (for a precise method to quan-
tify the amount of protein expressed from injected mRNA, see
Note 8).
3.3. In Vivo Labelling
of Eggs and Embryos
Dechorionated eggs of Phallusia can be labelled with vital fluores-
cent dyes to study the distribution of many organelles as well as
to observe surface, cortical and cytoplasmic reorganizations (see
Note 9). Dyes for mitochondria, chromosomes, plasma mem-
brane and yolk platelets are cell permeable, whereas labelling with
probes for calcium and ER requires injection.
3.3.1. Mitochondria
Incubate dechorionated eggs or embryos for 15–20 min in SW
containing a 1/1,000 dilution of the stock solution of any
one of the following mitochondrial dyes (Section 2.3): DiO-
C2(3), Mitotracker, TMRM, TMRE, Rhodamine123 (51,53)
(Fig. 14.1i,j). Wash once with SW before observation with the
appropriate filter set.
3.3.2. Chromosomes
Incubate eggs or embryos in 0.5 μg/mL Hoechst 33342 in SW
for 15 min and wash twice before observation (see Note 10).
Alternatively the less soluble Hoechst 33258 (make a stock solu-
tion as for Hoechst 33342) can be injected to avoid background
labelling of sperm if they cannot be washed away in time.
3.3.3. Plasma
Membrane
Four different approaches can be used to label plasma membrane.
1. DiI-C16(3): add 1 μL DiI Ethanol stock solution to 1 mL
SW. Pull the solution in a syringe and run through a small
gauge needle several times to create micelles. Add to an
equal volume of eggs or embryos suspended in SW. Incubate
2–5 min, during which some DiI micelles will fuse with the
plasma membranes. Wash by transferring eggs or embryos
386 Sardet et al.
to a large volume of SW. Mount and observe soon after
labelling.
2. FM 4-64: dilute FM 4-64 stock solution to 20 μg/mL in
SW and mix this working solution 1:1 with the live embryos
just prior to observation in a dish or directly on the GF-
coated slide (35). Washing is not necessary (see Note 11).
3. FITC: under alkaline conditions, FITC binds to the plasma
membrane and does not penetrate the egg. Incubate eggs in
FITC SW pH 10 (add 10 μL FITC stock to 990 μLSW
to make 0.1 mg/mL, add 50 μLNaOH1N)for20min.
Wash with SW before observation.
4. Succinylated concanavalin A: centrifuge the stock solution
before use to pellet insoluble particles. Add to eggs in SW
at 5 μg/mL final concentration and incubate for 15 min,
then wash twice with SW. Other lectins can be used (33)(see
Note 12).
3.3.4. Yolk Platelets
Incubate dechorionated eggs with 1 μM Syto12 in SW for
20 min. Wash once with SW (34).
3.3.5. Analysis of
Surface Movements
Place eggs or embryos in a coated Petri dish containing finely
ground Nile Blue particles in SW. Particles of chalk or charcoal or
a1μM suspension of fluospheres (Molecular Probes) can also be
used (54,55). Depending on the density of particles you want
to attach on the surface, either let eggs fall on particles for a
low density or gather eggs and particles to the centre of the dish
using a gentle swirling motion if you want many surface particles
attached. Wash several times with SW and select embryos with the
desired number and position of attached particles for observation.
3.3.6. Endoplasmic
Reticulum
Prepare a saturated solution of DiI-C16(3) in Wesson cooking
oil (Section 2.3). Micro-inject a small oil droplet into the egg or
embryo. Allow the dye to diffuse in the tubes and sheets of the
continuous ER network for 15–30 min prior to observation (33,
56)(Fig. 14.1i,j).
3.3.7. Calcium
Calcium-sensitive dyes (34,57)(see Note 13) that are cell perme-
able do not function in Phallusia eggs, so the free acid forms must
be injected. It is best to use dextran-coupled dyes because they
remain cytoplasmic unlike non-coupled dyes which enter large
organelles such as yolk vesicles. Inject an amount of Calcium-
Green dextran or Fura-2 dextran equivalent to approximately
0.1–0.2% egg volume to give final concentration in the egg of
10–20 μM(Fig. 14.1k). Wait 30 min for diffusion of the dye
before imaging. Calcium signals traverse the eggs within 10–20 s
and images must be acquired every few seconds in order to
observe wave-front propagation.
Embryological Methods in Ascidians: The Villefranche-sur-Mer Protocols 387
3.3.8. Mounting Live
Embryos for Imaging
See chambers for live imaging in Sections 2.1 and 3.1.
3.4. Blastomere
Isolations and
Ablations
Thanks to the stereotyped cell division pattern of ascidian
embryos, it is possible to isolate or ablate a blastomere with the
certainty of its identity (Fig. 14.1r). We find it possible to iso-
late individual blastomeres up to the 32 cell stage for embryos of
Ciona and Phallusia.
3.4.1. Blastomere
Isolations by Cutting
Isolation is carried out on a 1.5% agarose-coated Petri dish. Place
an embryo at the centre of dish and identify the blastomere of
interest. Place a glass knife between the blastomere of interest
and a neighbouring blastomere and then press the needle to sep-
arate them. By repeating the procedure on isolated portions of
embryos, a single blastomere can be isolated. One can also per-
form blastomere isolation on embryos mounted in a wedge as
described above for Section 3.2, using the same glass capillary
needles and hydraulic micro-manipulator as for micro-injection.
3.4.2. Embryo
Dissociation Using
Calcium-Free Sea Water
Rear embryos in SW as explained in Section 3.1. At the desired
stage, pipette a few embryos into a large volume of calcium-free
sea water (EMC). Transfer them a second time into fresh EMC to
ensure elimination of calcium. Using a fine-coated glass capillary
(Sections 2.1, steps 9 and 10), pipette the embryos roughly up
and down until blastomeres separate. Return isolated blastomeres
to SW for further divisions and observation. Embryos chosen for
dissociation should be early in the division cycle (prior to nuclear
envelope breakdown), since towards mitosis the lateral connec-
tions between blastomeres become tightly sealed up.
3.4.3. Blastomere
Ablations
Ablation is carried out on a 1.5% agarose-coated dish in a hole
made with a tungsten needle. The hole should be only slightly
bigger than the ascidian embryo. Place an embryo in the hole
made in the agarose. Using a stream of SW from micro-pipette,
rotate the embryo, so that the blastomere of interest faces you.
Ablation of a blastomere is achieved by injecting water into the
blastomere of interest until it bursts. With our stereo-microscope
setup, it is possible to ablate individual blastomeres from embryos
up to the 64 cell stage.
3.5. Fixing and
Immuno-labelling
Eggs and Embryos
Fixation and permeabilization procedures followed by fluorescent
labelling using antibodies can be carried out on large populations
of ascidian eggs and embryos or a small number of injected eggs
and embryos in order to analyse the distribution of macromolec-
ular structures. Usually, the localization of the cytoskeleton,
organelles, proteins and mRNAs can be best imaged using a
confocal microscope (33,58,59). Use of different primary
388 Sardet et al.
antibodies made in rabbit, mouse and rat allows one to distin-
guish several different proteins or macromolecular structures in
the same sample.
3.5.1. Fixation
Primary antibodies are initially tested on embryos fixed in two
different ways, some antibodies will work for immuno-labelling
with one of these fixatives but not the other (see Note 14).
1. Methanol fixation: collect dechorionated eggs, embryos or
tadpoles in a small volume of SW (less than 100 μL) and
plunge them into cold (–20◦C) methanol fixative stored in
screw cap tubes. Store the tube at –20◦C until use.
2. Formaldehyde fixation: add a small volume (less than
100 μL) of dechorionated eggs, embryos or tadpoles into
formaldehyde fixative stored in screw cap tubes. Fix for 2 h
at RT or ON at 4◦C with shaking (20 rpm). Place the tubes
upright in order to allow fixed eggs and embryos to settle
to the bottom. Wash three times in PBS and store 1–3 days
at 4◦C. For longer storage, one can replace the PBS with
ethanol by a graded series (25, 50, 75, 100%) of consecutive
washes and then place at –20◦C(see Note 15).
3.5.2. Immuno-labelling
Labelling of fixed samples is typically performed in volumes of
50–100 μL in 0.5 mL tubes or in multiwell plates (Falcon, flexi-
ble plate U-bottom). For all incubations >30 min, the multiwell
plate should be placed in a “humid chamber” made by lining an
appropriately sized plastic box or Petri dish with wet paper tow-
els. As examples we provide standard methods for labelling two
cell structures (microtubules and mitochondria) and for deter-
mining the localization of a protein of interest (aPKC: polar-
ity protein atypical protein kinase C) in methanol-fixed samples
(Fig. 14.1o–q).
1. Sample rehydration, permeabilization and blocking: trans-
fer the desired amount of fixed eggs and/or embryos to a
multiwell plate. Re-hydrate samples in 1:1 ethanol/PBS-Tw
solution, followed by three washes in PBS-Tw. The samples
are then blocked by washing three times for 10 min in PBS-
Tw-BSA with shaking (20 rpm).
2. Primary antibody labelling: dilute primary antibodies which
label mitochondria (NN18, raised in mouse) and tubulin
(YL1/2, raised in rat) in PBS-BSA and add to the fixed sam-
ples to give a final volume of 50–100 μL per well. Incubate
ON (see Note 16) at RT with shaking (20 rpm). Resuspend
the samples a few times during the incubation. Wash five
times in PBS-Tw.
3. Secondary antibody labelling: dilute secondary antibodies
in PBS-BSA and add to samples. Use an antibody raised
against rat immunoglobulin (pre-absorbed to minimize
mouse cross reaction, Section 2.5) coupled with rhodamine
Embryological Methods in Ascidians: The Villefranche-sur-Mer Protocols 389
and an antibody raised against mouse immunoglobulin (pre-
absorbed to minimize rat cross reaction, see material) cou-
pled with Cy5 (Fig. 14.1o). Incubate 4 h at RT with shaking
(20 rpm), resuspending gently from time to time.
3.5.3. Amplification with
Biotin/Streptavidin or
TSA Method
To detect some non-abundant proteins, it may be necessary to
amplify the signal of the secondary antibody. Amplification pro-
cedures also allow one to use less primary antibody, thus reducing
background and conserving precious antibodies.
1. Amplification using biotin/streptavidin: secondary anti-
bodies coupled to biotin bind multiple fluorescent strep-
tavidins and therefore increase the signal compared to
fluorophore-coupled secondary antibodies (but see Note 17
for biotin/streptavidin limitations). As an example, to detect
aPKC first incubate with a primary antibody raised in rab-
bit against a conserved aPKC peptide sequence (1/100
dilution). After washing as described above, incubate sam-
ples for 4 h with a biotin-conjugated anti-rabbit antibody.
Then dilute the fluorescein-labelled streptavidin in PBS-BSA
(Fig. 14.1p), add to samples and incubate for 2 h at RT with
shaking (20 rpm) and occasional resuspension.
2. Amplification using tyramide system amplification (TSA):
secondary antibodies coupled to peroxidase (HRP) react
with a detectable substrate to give enzymatic amplification
(see Note 5). In the TSA method, a labelled tyramide deriva-
tive covalently couples to amino groups of adjacent proteins
when activated by peroxidase. This allows strongly amplified
and high-resolution labelling, without the signal diffusion
that can occur with more commonly used methods based
on precipitation of coloured HRP substrates (see Note 5 for
TSA limitations). Incubate samples labelled with anti-aPKC
antibody (1/500 dilution) with a HRP-coupled secondary
antibody (1/100 dilution) for 4 h at RT. Dilute 1 μLof
30% H2O2in 200 μL of amplification buffer (provided in
the kit). Next, add 1 μL of the intermediate H2O2dilution
(in order to have a H2O2final concentration of 0.0015%)
and 1 μL of Alexa488-tyramide (reconstituted following the
manufacturer’s recommendations) to 100 μL of amplifica-
tion buffer. Mix and apply immediately to the samples. Reac-
tion time must be determined for each antibody but 20 min
is a good starting point. We have observed TSA reaction
times ranging from 5 min to 2 h (see Note 5)(Fig. 14.1q).
3.5.4. Labelling
Chromosomes
Wash immuno-labelled samples in PBS-Tw. Incubate with
Hoechst 33342 diluted in PBS for 15 min at RT with shak-
ing (20 rpm) (Fig. 14.1o). DNA labelling can also be achieved
by mounting embryos directly in Vectashield mounting medium
with DAPI (Vector Laboratories).
390 Sardet et al.
3.5.5. Actin
Microfilament Labelling
with Phalloidin in
Formaldehyde-Fixed
Samples
Formaldehyde fixation allows one to label actin using fluorescent
phalloidin (see Note 6)(Fig. 14.1n) in addition to immuno-
labelling of proteins.
1. Transfer the desired amount of fixed embryos to a multiwell
plate.
2. Wash with PBS-Tw, then permeabilize with PBS-Tr (see
Note 6) for 30 min with shaking (20 rpm).
3. Block with three times 10 min washes in PBS-Tw-BSA.
4. If desired, first immuno-label the protein of choice as
described above.
5. Label actin with phalloidin just before staining DNA and
mounting: dilute phalloidin coupled with rhodamine in
PBS-BSA and add to egg or embryo samples. Place the mul-
tiwell plate in a humid chamber and incubate 2 h at RT with
shaking (20 rpm), resuspending from time to time. Wash
once with PBS-Tw.
6. Immediately label DNA with Hoechst as above (step 4)
and mount as described below (Section 3.5.6). Phalloidin-
labelled samples should be imaged soon after labelling as the
signal decreases rapidly with time.
3.5.6. Mounting and
Imaging
Wash samples three times with PBS-Tw followed by three washes
with PBS. Put 20 μL of Citifluor mounting medium on a glass
slide. Deposit approximately 20 μL of labelled eggs or embryos
in the Citifluor drop. To create a spacer, add tiny feet to a cover-
slip (22 mm ×22 mm, #1) by swiping each of the corners in
modelling clay. Place the cover-slip on the drop of Citifluor con-
taining the sample and press gently on the four clay feet with for-
ceps in order to fix the cover-slip on the slide and immobilize eggs
or embryos (see Note 18). Seal with nail polish. Observe labelled
samples in a fluorescence or confocal microscope with appropriate
laser settings to discriminate between fluorophores.
3.6. Isolated
Cortices:
Preparation,
Labelling and
Imaging
A special advantage of the ascidian model is that isolated cor-
tical fragments can be prepared from eggs and early embryos
(2–16 cell stages) (Fig. 14.1s). Because isolated cortex prepa-
rations are extremely thin (0.5–5 μm), they are ideal for fluores-
cent and confocal microscopy and provide very high-resolution
images for determining the association of macromolecules with
the major components of the cortex (plasma membrane, ER and
microfilaments) (60). Furthermore, isolated cortices constitute an
“open-cell preparation” which does not require permeabilization
via exposure to detergents or organic solvents that have deleteri-
ous effects on cell structures (such as ER).
3.6.1. Preparing and
Fixing Cortices
Isolated cortical fragments are prepared as described in our pre-
vious publications (33,53,61) and in the BioMarCell web site
Embryological Methods in Ascidians: The Villefranche-sur-Mer Protocols 391
(see Note 1) with some modifications. The procedure is best
done by watching all steps under a stereo-microscope. Ascidian
eggs and embryos are deposited with a mouth pipette on a glass
cover-slip into a large drop of calcium-free sea water (EMC). Wait
20–30 s for eggs or embryos to settle and attach onto the cover-
slip. Replace EMC by isotonic Buffer X using a gentle stream
from a Pasteur pipette coming from the side of the cover-slip (do
this carefully in order to avoid breaking eggs and embryos). Wash
again with Buffer X. Then shear eggs and/or embryos with a
vigorous stream of Buffer X using a Pasteur pipette. Wash the
lawn of isolated cortical fragments quickly with Buffer X. Label
the ER with DiI if necessary (see below) and then fix with CIM
fixative for 30 min at RT in a humid chamber using gentle shak-
ing (5 rpm). Wash one time with CIM solution and three times
in PBS (see Note 19 for microtubule preservation and immuno-
labelling of unfixed cortices). ER can be labelled with DiO after
fixation (see below).
3.6.2. Endoplasmic
Reticulum Labelling
There are three ways to visualize the contiguous ER network on
isolated cortices (Fig. 14.1s–u).
1. Labelling of ER with CM-DiI-C16(3) (“fixable DiI”) before
fixation: remove Buffer X from just-isolated cortices (see
above). Dilute 1.7 μL of the CM-DiI stock solution in 0.5
mL of Buffer X and emulsify by passing the liquid through a
fine gauge needle. Apply to living isolated cortices and incu-
bate for 1 min. Wash one time with Buffer X and fix the
cortices with CIM fixative.
2. Labelling of ER with DiO-C6(3) after fixation: prepare iso-
lated cortices as described above and fix them with CIM fix-
ative. Wash one time with CIM solution, followed by three
washes in PBS. Expose fixed isolated cortices to DiO-C6(3)
diluted in PBS (0.2 μg/mL) for 10 s. Wash three times with
PBS. Observe the cortices and ER networks immediately.
If isolated cortices are to be immuno-labelled (see below),
DiO labelling should be performed after immuno-labelling
just before mounting.
3. Labelling of ER with DiO-C6(3) without fixation: remove
Buffer X from just-isolated cortices. Expose living isolated
cortices to DiO diluted to 0.2 μg/mL in Buffer X for 10 s.
Wash one time with Buffer X and observe immediately.
3.6.3. Mitochondria
Labelling
Some cortices (those made at 2 cell stage particularly) retain
plaques of mitochondria-rich myoplasm. It is possible to image
these mitochondria by isolating cortices from embryos which
were previously labelled with DiO-C2(3) as in Section 3.3 above.
392 Sardet et al.
3.6.4. Actin Labelling
Using Phalloidin
The best actin labelling is obtained when performed on freshly
isolated cortices before fixation. Live cortices are exposed for
2 min to Buffer X containing fluorescent phalloidin (prepared as
described in Section 2.5) followed by one wash with Buffer X and
fixation with CIM fixative. Then wash one time with CIM solu-
tion, three times in PBS and observe labelling with a fluorescence
or confocal microscope.
3.6.5. Immuno-labelling
of Cortices
Cortices can be labelled for microtubules, ribosomes (on rough
ER), mitochondria and other constituents using antibodies (33,
59,60). As an example, we provide methods for labelling aPKC
and microtubules on fixed isolated cortices (Fig. 14.1v).
1. Prepare and fix isolated cortices as described above (step 1).
For labelling of microtubules, we recommend adding EGTA
and taxol at 10 mM and 1 μg/mL, respectively, in Buffer X
during the process of shearing eggs and embryos and during
subsequent washes (see Note 19). Cover-slips are positioned
sample-side-up on a parafilm layer in Petri dish made into a
humid chamber.
2. Block with three washes of PBS-BSA for 10 min with gentle
shaking (5 rpm).
3. Dilute aPKC and YL1/2 antibodies in PBS-BSA and add
to samples a volume of 30–50 μL per cover-slip is sufficient.
Incubate antibody-covered cover-slips in the humid chamber
for 1 h at RT with gentle shaking (5 rpm).
4. Wash three times in PBS.
5. aPKC protein can be visualized using either fluorescent sec-
ondary antibodies or biotin/streptavidin amplification sys-
tem. In the case of biotin/streptavidin labelling, dilute
biotin-coupled secondary antibody in PBS-BSA and add to
sample. Use a Cy5 conjugated secondary antibody for visual-
izing microtubules. Incubate with secondary antibodies for
1 h at RT with gentle shaking (5 rpm).
6. Wash three times in PBS.
7. Dilute fluorescein-conjugated streptavidin in PBS-BSA, add
to sample and incubate 1 h at RT with gentle shaking
(5 rpm).
8. Wash three times in PBS.
3.6.6. Mounting and
Imaging
Put a 10 μL drop of Citifluor in the centre of a microscope slide.
Remove excess solution from the labelled isolated cortices on the
cover-slip, but do not allow it to dry out. Carefully position the
cover-slip unto the Citifluor drop and remove excess liquid with
absorbent paper. Seal with nail polish. Because isolated cortex
preparations are extremely thin (0.5–5 μm) they can be imaged
Embryological Methods in Ascidians: The Villefranche-sur-Mer Protocols 393
at high resolution with a regular fluorescent microscope. Confo-
cal microscopy allows very high resolution co-localization of ER,
ribosomes, microfilaments, microtubules and/or any mRNAs and
proteins of choice.
4. Notes
1. Useful links:
–Tunicate Portal: http://www.tunicate-portal.org/
index.htm
–Ascidian News: http://depts.washington.edu/ascidian
–ANISEED, Ascidians Network for In Situ Expression
and Embryological Data: (62): http://aniseed-ibdm.
univ-mrs.fr/
–GHOST, Ciona intestinalis genomic and cDNA
resources (63): http://ghost.zool.kyoto-u.ac.jp/
–FABA, Four-dimensional Ascidians Body Atlas (64,65):
http://chordate.bpni.bio.keio.ac.jp/faba2/2.0/top.
html
–DBTGR, DataBase of Tunicate Gene Regulation (64):
http://dbtgr.hgc.jp/
–CIPRO: an integrated protein database of the ascidian
Ciona intestinalis. http://cipro.ibio.jp/2.5/
–CITRES Ciona Intestinalis Transgenic line RESources
http://marinebio.nbrp.jp/ciona/index.jsp
–JGI Ciona genome browser: http://genome.jgi-psf.
org/Cioin2/Cioin2.home.html
–BioMarCell, Ascidians Film Archive (32): http://
biodev.obs-vlfr.fr/recherche/biomarcell/
–BioDev Research Unit, Villefranche-sur-Mer marine sta-
tion (McDougall/Yasuo/Sardet labs): http://biodev.
obs-vlfr.fr/recherche_en.htm
–Ascidian Stock Center at UC Santa Barbara: http://
www.ascidiancenter.ucsb.edu
–Dutch ascidians (about species worlwide): http://www.
ascidians.com
–Friday Harbor Centre for Cellular Dynamics methods:
http://raven.zoology.washington.edu/celldynamics/
downloads/index.html
2. mRNA detection using in situ hybridization is not
described in the present chapter. Protocols can be found
in previous publications (58,66–68) and in our chapter
394 Sardet et al.
“Localization and anchorage of maternal mRNAs to cor-
tical structures of ascidian eggs and embryos using high
resolution in situ hybridization” in a separate volume of
Methods in Molecular Biology (44).
3. Commercial antibodies and streptavidin are generally sup-
plied with sodium azide as preservative (or thimerosal in
case of HRP-coupled secondary antibodies and strepta-
vidins), allowing them to be conserved for several months
at 4◦C. If preservatives are not included by the man-
ufacturer, add sodium azide or thimer at 0.02% to the
antibodies before aliquoting and freezing.
4. Although the monoclonal NN18 antibody was orig-
inally produced against vertebrate neuro-filaments, in
ascidian embryos this antibody recognizes a mitochon-
drial ATP synthase subunit (personal communication of
T. Nishikata).
5. Many TSA kits corresponding to various fluorophores and
haptens exist. Although we generally use the Alexa488-
TSA kit from Molecular Probes, we sometimes use
Cy3-TSA and Cy5-TSA kits from PerkinElmer since they
are cheaper and provide intense red and far red fluorescent
signals. Biotin-TSA reaction followed by fluorescent
streptavidin labelling does not give a much better result
than direct fluorophore-TSA based reactions. Quenching
of endogenous peroxidases is not necessary for ascidian
eggs and early embryos when TSA method is used. TSA
amplification increases with time and is not linear with
respect to quantity of targeted protein in the cell; therefore
it is important to limit reaction times if the purpose is
meaningful comparisons of protein amount. We sometimes
observe high background staining with the TSA system
and it may be necessary to further dilute the primary
antibodies for optimization of signal-to-noise ratio. When
the confocal microscope is set to high sensitivity we have
noticed the presence of nuclear background labelling using
the TSA reaction.
6. Use of fluorescently coupled phalloidins is a convenient
way to label actin microfilaments; however, note that phal-
loidin labelling should not be performed on fixed samples
which have been dehydrated with alcohol (instead, a treat-
ment with Triton aids in permeabilization). For samples
which have been fixed in methanol or stored in ethanol, it is
possible to use an anti-actin antibody (Calbiochem CP01)
(59) to label microfilaments.
7. For horizontal injections, one can also use a “ledge” cham-
ber as in Jaffe and Terasaki, 2004 (46). A small piece of
Embryological Methods in Ascidians: The Villefranche-sur-Mer Protocols 395
coated cover-slip is pressed onto double stick tape (which
acts as the spacer) to give an overhanging side, so that the
eggs line up under or next to this ledge.
8. Injection quantification for fluorescent proteins produced
after mRNA injection can be performed as in Levasseur
and McDougall, 2000 (69). A calibration curve is made
by measuring the fluorescence from egg-sized droplets
containing known concentrations of GFP protein. The
droplets are formed by extruding different GFP solutions
from a micro-injection needle under silicone onto cover-
slips treated with dimethyldichlorosilicane (2% in 1,1,1-
trichloroethane) to remove the surface tension, so that
the egg-sized bubbles remain spherical. Accurate produc-
tion of egg-sized droplets is important since the fluores-
cence intensity is proportional to total volume as well as
to concentration. Using the same imaging parameters (fil-
ters, exposure time, binning, etc.) measure the fluorescence
of the injected egg and compare this value to the calibra-
tion curve to determine the concentration of the fluores-
cent protein in vivo.
9. In vivo labelling techniques work best for transparent eggs
and embryos of Phallusia (33,55), whereas for Ciona eggs
and embryos the opacity of yolk vesicles and intrinsic auto-
fluorescence hinder the detection of fluorescent labelling
unless it is near the surface. Fixed Ciona samples are suit-
able for fluorescent detection of proteins or mRNAs; how-
ever, signal intensity and resolution are greater in transpar-
ent eggs and embryos of Phallusia (58).
10. Live embryos can only be labelled for short periods
(30 min) with Hoechst because it inhibits DNA replication
and results in DNA bridges.
11. FM 4-64 tends to concentrate at the centrosomes if
embryos are crowded on the slide and dying.
12. Concanavalin A (non-succinylated) and wheat germ agglu-
tinin (WGA) also label membranes of fertilized eggs and
embryos, but they should not be used on unfertilized eggs
because they induce capping and cause eggs to be acti-
vated (70).
13. A ratiometric method should be used when one wishes to
quantify calcium signals or to control for artefacts due to
sample thickness, cytoplasmic domains, or dye concentra-
tion. The eggs can be injected either with the ratiometric
dye Fura-2 dextran or with a mixture of Calcium-Green
dextran and the calcium-insensitive dye Texas-Red dextran.
Acquire fluorescent images simultaneously with appropri-
ate excitation and emission filters.
396 Sardet et al.
14. Methanol treatment causes instantaneous fixation by dehy-
dration and a good permeabilization of eggs and embryos.
Microtubule structures are well preserved by methanol fix-
ation. A high concentration of EGTA (50 mM) is added
to the methanol as tubulin is one of the major targets
of the potent calcium-dependant protease. Formaldehyde
treatment causes progressive fixation by making intra-
and inter-molecular bonds. It is well suited for main-
taining the integrity of the cell cortex and in particular
microfilament labelling using phalloidin. Fixations for elec-
tron microscopy of whole eggs and embryos and cortices
prepared from them are not detailed here but can be found
in our previous publications (33,61).
15. The ethanol dehydration step after formaldehyde fixa-
tion further permeabilizes the samples and improves sig-
nal for many antibodies and for labelling of structures deep
within the embryo (but is not compatible with phalloidin
labelling, see Note 6). As for methanol-fixed embryos,
ethanol-dehydrated samples should be re-hydrated into
PBS before immuno-labelling.
16. Incubation with antibodies can be shortened to 2 h at RT
but labelling structures situated deep within the embryo is
better with ON incubation at RT or 4◦C.
17. Although biotin/streptavidin gives good amplification of
signals, note that streptavidin attaches to mitochondria
yielding background labelling. Therefore this method is
not appropriate for detection of cytoplasmic proteins.
18. It is important that the embryos be slightly compressed and
snug between slide and cover-slip if an oil immersion objec-
tive is to be used. This is not necessary for an air objective
which does not touch the cover-slip.
19. Calcium ions are implicated in microtubule depolymeriza-
tion and we observed that adding EGTA to Buffer X helps
to preserve microtubules on isolated cortices. Moreover
addition of taxol, a drug which stabilizes microtubules,
gives better results than EGTA alone. Also note that it
is also possible to immuno-label unfixed live cortices (an
open-cell preparation) by diluting primary and secondary
antibodies in Buffer X instead of PBS and using brief incu-
bation times (5 min separated by quick washes with Buffer
X). Observe live-labelled cortices within 30 min of mak-
ing cortices, since as time passes the ER network will start
vesiculating.
Embryological Methods in Ascidians: The Villefranche-sur-Mer Protocols 397
Acknowledgements
We thank personnel of the Developmental Biology unit (BioDev,
Villefranche-sur-Mer Marine Station, CNRS/UPMC UMR7009,
France) for helpful discussions and previous members of the Ville-
franche lab, Fabrice Roegiers and François Prodon. We thank M.
Khamla for help with graphics. The laboratories of C. Sardet,
A. McDougall and H. Yasuo are supported by ANR (Agence
Nationale de la Recherche), CNRS-ACI (Centre National de
la Recherche Scientifique—Action Concertée Incitative), UPMC
(Université Pierre et Marie Curie, Paris 06), ARC (Association
pour la Recherche sur le Cancer) and AFM (Association Française
contre les Myopathies).
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