FISH/ double FISH protocol
Papers and other sites:
Davidson, L. A.,
and Keller, R. E. (1999). Neural tube closure in Xenopus laevis involves medial
migration, directed protrusive activity, cell intercalation, and convergent
extension. Development,
126:4547-4556
Zhou, X. and Vize,
P.D. (2004). Proximo-distal specialization of epithelial transport processes
within the Xenopus pronephric tubules. Developmental
Biology 271: 322-338.
Davidson, Keller,
and DeSimone (2004) Patterning and tissue movements in a novel explant preparation
of the marginal zone of Xenopus laevis. Gene
Expression Patterns Jul;4(4):457-66.
Lance
Davidson's flourescent in situ methods page
Protocol.
The
generation of fixable fluorescent products relies on a tyramide substrate. This
is literally a tyramide linked to your favorite fluor. The tyramide is converted
to a reactive form by HRP in the presence of H2O2, and this reactive form binds
to a local protein (usually the ring on tyrosines...), thus localizing and fixing
your fluor. Following the reaction you wash out the unreacted tyramide conjugant
and visualize using fluorescence or confocal microscopy.
You can purchase tyramides conjugated to various fluors from Molecular Probes,
Perkin Elmer etc. We have tried some of these and NONE worked- the Molecular
Probes kits gave zero signal. It is trivial to make your own, as outlined in
the linked pages. The only issue here is where you get your NHS-fluors, once
again some we have purchased did not work at all. A listing of the good, bad
and ugly appears below. To date we have had the best luck with NHS-FITC
from Pierce and NHS-Cy3 from Amersham.
The
fluor is stable to embryo bleaching in standard methanol/peroxide bleach,
so you can stain then bleach as per colorimetric in situs, at least for FITC
and Cy3. FITC fades a little on bleaching, Cy3
is rock solid.
We often use fluorescent in situ as a counterstain to normal BM-purple in situs.
You can overlay the images and get effective overlaps, or simply use the fluor
for contextual detail visually. Details of the combination, and the Photoshop
tricks used to generate images such as the one above, are from the Dev Biol.
paper, but are also outlined on the FCIS page.
Perform in situ hybridization using the standard protocol from the CSH manual
or the Harland
lab. Use DIG, FITC or DNP labeled probes. Detect bound probe using a HRP-coupled
antibody. If you are using a DIG labeled antisense mRNA use:
Roche Anti-DIG-POD (POD = HRP) cat # 1 207 733
If you have a FITC labelled RNA use:
Roche anti-fluorescein-POD cat# 1 426 346
The following is all performed in stardard 5ml glass vials
1. following in situ protocol wash in PBST (PBS with 0.01% Tween 20).
2. add H2O2 to final conc. of
2%. incubate 60 minutes at room temp.
3. wash twice with TBST (12 mMTris pH7,5, 150 mM NaCl, 0.01% Tween20)
4. add standard antibody blocking solution, after 5 minutes add Roche Anti-DIG-POD
antibody at 1:1000. incubate at 4 deg C overnight with rocking.
5. wash 5 x 1hr at room temp in TBST
6. wash in PBST 2 x 10 min. This is important- do not
use TBS. add tyramide-FITC at 1:100 to 1:1,000
7. incubate at room temp. for 20 minutes
8. add H2O2 to final conc. of
0.001% (2 ul of 1/1000 diluted stock to 200ul PBST)
9. incubate at room temp for 30 - 40 minutes
10. for single color wash in TBST for 24 - 48 hours (or more) with multiple
changes. (Yes, one to 2 days!). For two or three color go onto next step (wash
out all colors together later)
11. to do a second color begin again at step 2, the high H2O2 will inactivate
the previously bound HRP, then skip to step 6. 2% H2O2
should stop any cross-over, but 3% is also fine if you have any trouble.
12.
wash for one to 2 days with rocking. We usually wash at 4 deg C over the weekend.
Weak signals? Lance recommends doing repeated tyramide cycles, each one for
30 minutes. We find that simply increasing tyramide concentrations is even better
and do just one cycle. this is why we use 1:100 tyramide or even 1:50, rather
than the 1:1000 in other protocols. When you make it yourself its cheap and
doesn't cause background.
Note:
for double fluor reactions ...
Develop the Cy3 fluorescence first using a DIG labeled probe (you don't want
the FITC-tyramide being detected by your anti-FITC antibody in round 2...).
DNP nucleotides and anti-DNP-HRP are available from Perkin-Elmer
to use this option. it is more sensitive than FITC nucletides/antibodies from
Roche.
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