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Experimental Protocols

Embryo Medium

Embryonic Ganglia

Luria Broth

50x TAE

Antibody Staining

Pond Water

Preparation of Embryonic Ganglia in a Collagen Matrix

Protocol for Culturing of Embryonic Ganglia in a Collagen Matrix: (adapted 07-01-04 by Michael Baker from S. Blackshaw et al., (1997). Proc. R. Soc. Lond. B. 264: 657-661)

Reagents & Prior Preparations:

  • Acid washed and concavalin A coated coverslips or equivalent.
  • L-15 Embryonic culture media with supplements according to recipe by Birgit Zipser (see culture media description). Media should always be made fresh or frozen and then supplemented with growth factors, glutamine and Vitamin C as Vitamin C and glutamine are not stable in solution.
  • Rat tail collagen type I (e.g. BD BIOSCIENCES Catalog Number: 354236).
  • 7.5 % sterile filtered solution Na2C03.
  • 10X sterile filtered L15 made from powder.
  • Collagen/Dispase 22 mg/ml stock (~10x).
  • 35 mm covered petri dishes or equivalent for holding coverslips and culture media.
  • Fire-polished glass capillaries with attached tubing and mouth piece for suction. The inner diameter of capillary should be approximately 10% larger than long-dimension of individual ganglia to be plated.
Protocol:
  1. Pin out embryo on Sylgard dish with the dorsal side up. Remove sinus surrounding CNS with sharpened tungsten wire. With scissors or equivalent fine cutting tool, cut connectives between ganglia and remove isolated ganglia with gentle suction and careful tearing/cutting of the lateral roots. Place ganglia in drop of L15.
  2. Partial collagenase digestion of the capsule may improve outgrowth (Subhas Biswas; personal communication). Add collagenase (~1-2 .l of a 20mg/ml stock solutionn) to droplet of L15 and transfer ganglia by suction to the drop (I routinely digest for between 5 and 10 min). If collagenase is used, careful and repeated washing of the ganglia will be required (by using repeated pipeting and collection and transfers to fresh L15 droplets).
  3. On ice, prepare collagen solution for plating. Collagen is stored and maintained in solution by keeping it in 0.02 N Acetic Acid. Gelling characteristics of collagen determined by temperature, concentration and pH (it begins to gel as it approaches neutrality). Empirical testing with collagen solutionn from BD BIOSCIENCE suggests that their product will gel with increasing degrees of hardness beginning at around 50% collagen in solution. I have used it in a 9:1 dilution (adding 10 microliters of 10X L15 (no supplements) to 90 microliters of collagen and mixing it in an eppindorf tube by pippeting carefully so as to not introduce air bubbles. Sodium bicarbonate solution is then added until the phenol red indication goes from clear-yellow to pink red indicating a pH near neutral. Careful mixing is required (usually 2-3 microliters of Na2C03. Solution is kept on ice until ready for use.
  4. On a glass coverslip add 20-30 microliters of collagen-L15 solution, taking care not to introduce bubbles and spreading it out with micropipet tip until desired depth is obtained (suggested twice thickness of individual ganglion, .100 µm).
  5. Transfer the ganglia with suction capillary into Collagen-L15 droplet. Care should be taken so as to not dilute collagen solution with further L15 from the ganglia-droplet (some dilution will of course be unavoidable). Ganglia should be placed/pressed into the collagen solution making sure that surface tension does not hold them to the surface. Leave covered in a darkened-humidifying chamber for approximately 30 min-1 hour until collagen has gelled. Carefully add supplemented embryonic culture media (1-2 ml).
  6. To minimize bacterial contamination, media should be exchanged daily by careful removal at side of dish.