fbpx

An Abnormal Absence of Antibodies: Filling the Gaps with Gene Editing Tools in Zebrafish

The zebrafish is an increasingly popular laboratory organism with many experimental advantages. The animal model has been used by biologists to discover the detailed processes that underlie vertebrate development and disease, and study vertebrate haematopoiesis and immune cell interactions1. The zebrafish embryo is also a popular vertebrate model for neurobiology2.

Zebrafish research, however, is limited by a paucity of good antibody reagents that are essential tools for determining the precise details of biological processes3. Consequently, zebrafish researchers have historically been plagued by a paucity of robust antibodies in zebrafish.

In my view, the advent of CRISPR/Cas9-mediated gene editing in zebrafish makes it possible to circumvent this problem by utilizing gene editing technologies to introduce epitope tags and fluorescent markers at native loci to enable accurate and robust localization and isolation of genes of interest in zebrafish and other organisms4.

The edited ntlV5 allele is expressed faithfully (B-E). The expression pattern of the V5 antigen in (B) mid- and (D) late-gastrula ntlV5/+ embryos revealed by immunohistochemistry mimics the expression of ntl transcripts detected by in situ hybridization in comparably staged embryos (C, E). Image source: Hoshijima, K., Jurynec, M. J., & Grunwald, D. J.4. Precise editing of the zebrafish genome made simple and efficient. Developmental cell, 36(6), 654-667.

In this experiment, the V5 epitope tag is detectable by common commercially available antibodies. The use of a known epitope sequence that is precisely integrated into the genome streamlines validation of expression patterns in genes of interest, bypassing issues including proprietary epitope sequences and variability in antibody generation methods.

A knock-in GFP allele of ntl drives reporter expression in vivo (zebrafish embryo, 24 hpf). Image source: Hoshijima, K., Jurynec, M. J., Grunwald, D. J.4. Precise editing of the zebrafish genome made simple and efficient. Developmental cell, 36(6), 654-667.

In addition to addressing availability of robust antibodies, advances in gene editing technology will enable researchers to revisit long-standing issues of reproducibility in the biological sciences on a larger scale, potentially through revamping of the antibody validation pipeline. Utilizing CRISPR/Cas9 to generate knock-out and knock-in animal strains and cell lines for use in antibody validation experiments is one potential application in this arena. New and emerging variations on this gene editing technology will likely be a key player in ongoing discussions of reproducibility in the biological sciences.

Learn more about our Zebrafish knock-in Services.

 

References

  1. Staudt, N., Müller-Sienerth, N., Fane-Dremucheva, A., Yusaf, S. P., Millrine, D., Wright, G. J. (2015). A panel of recombinant monoclonal antibodies against zebrafish neural receptors and secreted proteins suitable for wholemount immunostaining. Biochemical and biophysical research communications, 456(1), 527-533.
  2. Dobson, J. T., Da’as, S., McBride, E. R., Berman, J. N. (2009). Fluorescence‐activated cell sorting (FACS) of whole mount in situ hybridization (WISH) labelled haematopoietic cell populations in the zebrafish. British journal of haematology, 144(5), 732-735.
  3. Wright, Gavin James; Sanger Institute, Cambridge, United Kingdom (http://grantome.com/grant/NIH/R01-NS063400-01)
  4. Hoshijima, K., Jurynec, M. J., Grunwald, D. J. (2016). Precise editing of the zebrafish genome made simple and efficient. Developmental cell, 36(6), 654-667.

About The Author

Ben Jussila

Ben is an R&D scientist at InVivo Biosystems, specializing in genome editing with CRISPR/Cas9 technology in zebrafish. He received his Bachelor of Science from the University of Minnesota in Genetics, Cell Biology & Development in 2014, and worked as a research technician in the laboratory of Dr. Kristen Kwan at the University of Utah prior to joining the InVivo Biosystems team in 2018. Ben is passionate about nature and conservation, and in his spare time enjoys science outreach, field herpetology, his cats, and raising and breeding reptiles and amphibians.

Share this articles

Facebook
Twitter
Pinterest
LinkedIn
Ben Jussila

About the Author:

Connect with us