Nature Communications (Oct 2024)

Robotic microinjection enables large-scale transgenic studies of Caenorhabditis elegans

  • Peng Pan,
  • Michael Zoberman,
  • Pengsong Zhang,
  • Sharanja Premachandran,
  • Sanjana Bhatnagar,
  • Pallavi P. Pilaka-Akella,
  • William Sun,
  • Chengyin Li,
  • Charlotte Martin,
  • Pengfei Xu,
  • Zefang Zhang,
  • Ryan Li,
  • Wesley Hung,
  • Hua Tang,
  • Kailynn MacGillivray,
  • Bin Yu,
  • Runze Zuo,
  • Karinna Pe,
  • Zhen Qin,
  • Shaojia Wang,
  • Ang Li,
  • W. Brent Derry,
  • Mei Zhen,
  • Arneet L. Saltzman,
  • John A. Calarco,
  • Xinyu Liu

DOI
https://doi.org/10.1038/s41467-024-53108-5
Journal volume & issue
Vol. 15, no. 1
pp. 1 – 15

Abstract

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Abstract The nematode Caenorhabditis elegans is widely employed as a model organism to study basic biological mechanisms. However, transgenic C. elegans are generated by manual injection, which remains low-throughput and labor-intensive, limiting the scope of approaches benefitting from large-scale transgenesis. Here, we report a robotic microinjection system, integrating a microfluidic device capable of reliable worm immobilization, transfer, and rotation, for high-speed injection of C. elegans. The robotic system provides an injection speed 2-3 times faster than that of experts with 7–22 years of experience while maintaining comparable injection quality and only limited trials needed by users to become proficient. We further employ our system in a large-scale reverse genetic screen using multiplexed alternative splicing reporters, and find that the TDP-1 RNA-binding protein regulates alternative splicing of zoo-1 mRNA, which encodes variants of the zonula occludens tight junction proteins. With its high speed, high accuracy, and high efficiency in worm injection, this robotic system shows great potential for high-throughput transgenic studies of C. elegans.