Bio-Protocol (Sep 2019)

Explant Culture of the Embryonic Mouse Spinal Cord and Gene Transfer by ex vivo Electroporation

  • Mariko Kinoshita-Kawada,
  • Hiroshi Hasegawa,
  • Tsunaki Hongu,
  • Shigeru Yanagi,
  • Yasunori Kanaho,
  • Ichiro Masai,
  • Takayasu Mishima,
  • Xiaoping Chen,
  • Yoshio Tsuboi,
  • Yi Rao,
  • Junichi Yuasa-Kawada,
  • Jane Wu

DOI
https://doi.org/10.21769/BioProtoc.3373
Journal volume & issue
Vol. 9, no. 18

Abstract

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Developing axons change responsiveness to guidance cues during the journey to synapse with target cells. Axon crossing at the ventral midline serves as a model for studying how axons accomplish such a switch in their response. Although primary neuron culture has been a versatile technique for elucidating various developmental mechanisms, many in vivo characteristics of neurons, such as long axon-extending abilities and axonal compartments, are not thoroughly preserved. In explant cultures, such properties of differentiated neurons and tissue architecture are maintained. To examine how the midline repellent Slit regulated the distribution of the Robo receptor in spinal cord commissural axons upon midline crossing and whether Robo trafficking machinery was a determinant of midline crossing, novel explant culture systems were developed. We have combined an “open-book” spinal cord explant method with that devised for flat-mount retinae. Here we present our protocol for explant culture of embryonic mouse spinal cords, which allows flexible manipulation of experimental conditions, immunostaining of extending axons and quantitative analysis of individual axons. In addition, we present a modified method that combines ex vivo electroporation and “closed-book” spinal cord explant culture. These culture systems provide new platforms for detailed analysis of axon guidance, by adapting gene knockdown, knockout and genome editing.