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Long-Distance Three-Color Neuronal Tracing in Fixed Tissue Using NeuroVue Dyes

Dissecting development of neuronal connections is critical for understanding neuronal function in both normal and diseased states. Charting the development of the multitude of connections is a monumental task, since a given neuron typically receives hundreds of convergent inputs from other neurons a...

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Autores principales: Jensen-Smith, Heather, Gray, Brian, Muirhead, Katharine, Ohlsson-Wilhelm, Betsy, Fritzsch, Bernd
Formato: Texto
Lenguaje:English
Publicado: Informa Healthcare 2007
Materias:
Acceso en línea:https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pmc/articles/PMC2430174/
https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pubmed/18161528
http://dx.doi.org/10.1080/08820130701706711
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author Jensen-Smith, Heather
Gray, Brian
Muirhead, Katharine
Ohlsson-Wilhelm, Betsy
Fritzsch, Bernd
author_facet Jensen-Smith, Heather
Gray, Brian
Muirhead, Katharine
Ohlsson-Wilhelm, Betsy
Fritzsch, Bernd
author_sort Jensen-Smith, Heather
collection PubMed
description Dissecting development of neuronal connections is critical for understanding neuronal function in both normal and diseased states. Charting the development of the multitude of connections is a monumental task, since a given neuron typically receives hundreds of convergent inputs from other neurons and provides divergent outputs for hundreds of other neurons. Although progress is being made utilizing various mutants and/or genetic constructs expressing fluorescent proteins like GFP, substantial work remains before a database documenting the development and final location of the neuronal pathways in an adult animal is completed. The vast majority of developing neurons cannot be specifically labeled with antibodies and making specific GFP-expressing constructs to tag each of them is an overwhelming task. Fortunately, fluorescent lipophilic dyes have emerged as very useful tools to systematically compare changes in neuronal networks between wild-type and mutant mice. These dyes diffuse laterally along nerve cell membranes in fixed preparations, allowing tracing of the position of a given neuron within the neuronal network in murine mutants fixed at various stages of development. Until recently, however, most evaluations have been limited to one, or at most, two color analyses. We have previously reported three color neuronal profiling using the novel lipophilic dyes NeuroVue (NV) Green, Red and Maroon (Fritzsch et al., Brain. Res. Bull. 66:249–258, 2005). Unfortunately such three color experiments have been limited by the fact that NV Green and its brighter successor, NV Emerald, both exhibit substantially decreased signal intensities when times greater than 48 hours at 37°C are required to achieve neuronal profile filling (unpublished observations). Here we describe a standardized test system developed to allow comparison of candidate dyes and its use to evaluate a series of 488 nm-excited green-emitting lipophilic dyes. The best of these, NV Jade, has spectral properties well matched to NV Red and NV Maroon, better solubility in DMF than DiO or DiA, improved thermostability compared with NV Emerald, and the ability to fill neuronal profiles at rates of 1 mm per day for periods of at least 5 days. Use of NV Jade in combination with NV Red and NV Maroon substantially improves the efficiency of connectional analysis in complex mutants and transgenic models where limited numbers of specimens are available.
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spelling pubmed-24301742008-06-24 Long-Distance Three-Color Neuronal Tracing in Fixed Tissue Using NeuroVue Dyes Jensen-Smith, Heather Gray, Brian Muirhead, Katharine Ohlsson-Wilhelm, Betsy Fritzsch, Bernd Immunol Invest Article Dissecting development of neuronal connections is critical for understanding neuronal function in both normal and diseased states. Charting the development of the multitude of connections is a monumental task, since a given neuron typically receives hundreds of convergent inputs from other neurons and provides divergent outputs for hundreds of other neurons. Although progress is being made utilizing various mutants and/or genetic constructs expressing fluorescent proteins like GFP, substantial work remains before a database documenting the development and final location of the neuronal pathways in an adult animal is completed. The vast majority of developing neurons cannot be specifically labeled with antibodies and making specific GFP-expressing constructs to tag each of them is an overwhelming task. Fortunately, fluorescent lipophilic dyes have emerged as very useful tools to systematically compare changes in neuronal networks between wild-type and mutant mice. These dyes diffuse laterally along nerve cell membranes in fixed preparations, allowing tracing of the position of a given neuron within the neuronal network in murine mutants fixed at various stages of development. Until recently, however, most evaluations have been limited to one, or at most, two color analyses. We have previously reported three color neuronal profiling using the novel lipophilic dyes NeuroVue (NV) Green, Red and Maroon (Fritzsch et al., Brain. Res. Bull. 66:249–258, 2005). Unfortunately such three color experiments have been limited by the fact that NV Green and its brighter successor, NV Emerald, both exhibit substantially decreased signal intensities when times greater than 48 hours at 37°C are required to achieve neuronal profile filling (unpublished observations). Here we describe a standardized test system developed to allow comparison of candidate dyes and its use to evaluate a series of 488 nm-excited green-emitting lipophilic dyes. The best of these, NV Jade, has spectral properties well matched to NV Red and NV Maroon, better solubility in DMF than DiO or DiA, improved thermostability compared with NV Emerald, and the ability to fill neuronal profiles at rates of 1 mm per day for periods of at least 5 days. Use of NV Jade in combination with NV Red and NV Maroon substantially improves the efficiency of connectional analysis in complex mutants and transgenic models where limited numbers of specimens are available. Informa Healthcare 2007-09 2007-12-27 /pmc/articles/PMC2430174/ /pubmed/18161528 http://dx.doi.org/10.1080/08820130701706711 Text en © Informa Healthcare USA, Inc. http://creativecommons.org/licenses/by/2.0/ This is an open-access article distributed under the terms of the Creative Commons Attribution License, which permits unrestricted use, distribution, and reproduction in any medium, provided the original work is properly cited.
spellingShingle Article
Jensen-Smith, Heather
Gray, Brian
Muirhead, Katharine
Ohlsson-Wilhelm, Betsy
Fritzsch, Bernd
Long-Distance Three-Color Neuronal Tracing in Fixed Tissue Using NeuroVue Dyes
title Long-Distance Three-Color Neuronal Tracing in Fixed Tissue Using NeuroVue Dyes
title_full Long-Distance Three-Color Neuronal Tracing in Fixed Tissue Using NeuroVue Dyes
title_fullStr Long-Distance Three-Color Neuronal Tracing in Fixed Tissue Using NeuroVue Dyes
title_full_unstemmed Long-Distance Three-Color Neuronal Tracing in Fixed Tissue Using NeuroVue Dyes
title_short Long-Distance Three-Color Neuronal Tracing in Fixed Tissue Using NeuroVue Dyes
title_sort long-distance three-color neuronal tracing in fixed tissue using neurovue dyes
topic Article
url https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pmc/articles/PMC2430174/
https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pubmed/18161528
http://dx.doi.org/10.1080/08820130701706711
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