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Lecture 1 Overview of early mouse development and methodology ding list is at end of notes for this l
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Lecture 1 Overview of early mouse development and methodology nb reading list is at end of notes for this lecture.

Dec 14, 2015

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Page 1: Lecture 1 Overview of early mouse development and methodology nb reading list is at end of notes for this lecture.

Lecture 1

Overview of early mouse development and methodology

nb reading list is at end of notes for this lecture

Page 2: Lecture 1 Overview of early mouse development and methodology nb reading list is at end of notes for this lecture.

Vertebrate development – classical models

1mm

1 cm 100 microns

Phylotypicstage

Similar Similar

Page 3: Lecture 1 Overview of early mouse development and methodology nb reading list is at end of notes for this lecture.

Development = origami using layers/sheets of cells

Three germ layers, Ectoderm, Mesoderm, and Endoderm (derm=layer), give rise to all cells and tissues of the developing embryo.

Vertebrates are triploblasts

Page 4: Lecture 1 Overview of early mouse development and methodology nb reading list is at end of notes for this lecture.

Why study the mouse?

• The Victorian mouse fancy movement provided a ready made resourceof inbred strains, variants and mutants

• Fast generation time (21 day gestation)

• Amenable to genetic manipulation

• Tissue culture models

Page 5: Lecture 1 Overview of early mouse development and methodology nb reading list is at end of notes for this lecture.

Positional informationCell Fate

Anterior (Head)

Posterior (Tail)

Dorsal (Back)Ventral (Front)

Left

Right

Identity and location

Page 6: Lecture 1 Overview of early mouse development and methodology nb reading list is at end of notes for this lecture.

Mammals have extensive extraembryonic tissues

Page 7: Lecture 1 Overview of early mouse development and methodology nb reading list is at end of notes for this lecture.

In utero development in mouse occurs over 19-21 days

• E (embryo stage) = dpc (days post coitum). Most commonly referred to from 0.5 onwardsas mating takes place at night.

• Preimplantation development occurs up to E3.5. All other development occurs postimplantation.

Page 8: Lecture 1 Overview of early mouse development and methodology nb reading list is at end of notes for this lecture.

Preimplantation Development

Trophectoderm

Primitive (primary) endoderm

Inner cell mass/Primitive ectoderm

Cleavage stages

Zona pelucida

Blastocoel cavity

Activation of embryonic genome

Blastomere

0 1 2 3 4 days

Page 9: Lecture 1 Overview of early mouse development and methodology nb reading list is at end of notes for this lecture.

Early Post-implantation Development

Page 10: Lecture 1 Overview of early mouse development and methodology nb reading list is at end of notes for this lecture.

Gastrulation and Beyond

Page 11: Lecture 1 Overview of early mouse development and methodology nb reading list is at end of notes for this lecture.

Confusing nomenclature!

A ‘derm’ is a cell layer – not a cell type!

Page 12: Lecture 1 Overview of early mouse development and methodology nb reading list is at end of notes for this lecture.

Our understanding of the world can only be as good as the state of the art technology we use to measure it – knowledge is relative, not absolute.

Page 13: Lecture 1 Overview of early mouse development and methodology nb reading list is at end of notes for this lecture.

Experimental Tools for studying mouse embryos

Embryological approaches; • Histological analysis and conventional microscopy

• Cell fate mapping (dyes and now tagged loci)

• In vitro culture of preimplantation stages and in some cases postimplantation stages.

Page 14: Lecture 1 Overview of early mouse development and methodology nb reading list is at end of notes for this lecture.

• Chimera formation and embryo aggregation.

• Cell culture models

e.g. tetraploid chimeras for testing gene function in extraembryonic vs embryonic lineages.

Embryological approaches;

Embryonic stem (ES) cells

• Embryo manipulation/transplantation

Page 15: Lecture 1 Overview of early mouse development and methodology nb reading list is at end of notes for this lecture.

• In situ hybridization

• Immunohistochemistry

Eed + NanogOct4 + Eed

Sections Wholemount

Molecular embryology;

• Gene expression profiling of embryos, dissected fragments, derivative tissue culture cell lines and single cells.

Page 16: Lecture 1 Overview of early mouse development and methodology nb reading list is at end of notes for this lecture.

Genetic approaches;• Classical mouse mutants

Brachyury mouse with short tail is dominant mutation in gene fortranscription factor required for mesoderm formation.

• Genetic screens

Wild-type and Nodal (d/d) mutant embryos with staining for markers of primitive streak (brown) and ectoderm (dark blue).

Chemical (ENU) mutagenesis – requires lengthy genetic mapping and cloning to identify mutated locus

Insertional or ‘gene trap’ mutagenesis in ES cells – can go directly to gene of interest

SA

SD

Antibiotic resistancemarker

Reporter gene

IRESPolyA signal

Page 17: Lecture 1 Overview of early mouse development and methodology nb reading list is at end of notes for this lecture.

• Production of transgenic mice by pronuclear injection of DNA

- Gene construct injected into male pronucleus of 1-cell embryo

- DNA integrates randomly at single site, usually multicopy

Genetic manipulation in mouse;

• Production of genetically modified mice by transferring ES cells to recipient embryo

- Gene manipulation using homologous recombination in ES cells

- Inject modified cells intoRecipient embryo to produce chimeric animal that transmits donor genome through the germ-line.

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• Gene targeting in embryonic stem (ES) cells

Genetic manipulation in mouse;

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Conventional gene knockout strategy (replacement vector)

X X

Positive selectableMarker gene

Negative selectableMarker gene

Knock-out (or Knock-in)

Genetic manipulation in mouse;

Page 20: Lecture 1 Overview of early mouse development and methodology nb reading list is at end of notes for this lecture.

Positive selectableMarker gene

Negative selectableMarker gene

X X

+ site specific recombinase (Cre or Flp)

+

Recombinase recognition sequence

Conditional gene knockout strategy;

Genetic manipulation in mouse;

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Homozygous conditional allele Transgenic mouse expressing site specific recombinasein tissue specific pattern

X

Analyse phenotype in F1 embryos or adults

Examples of recombinase driver transgenics;

- Cre recombinase driven by Nanog promoter

- Estrogen receptor-Cre recombinase fusion driven by constitutive promoter. Addition of Tamoxifen to drinking water triggers nucleartranslocation of recombinase giving temporal control of gene deletion.

Conditional gene knockout strategy;

Genetic manipulation in mouse;

Page 22: Lecture 1 Overview of early mouse development and methodology nb reading list is at end of notes for this lecture.

Textbook; Principles of Development, Lewis Wolpert and Cheryl Tickle. Review papers;Lecture 1 -3 Alexandre (2001) International Journal of Developmental Biology 45, p457-467 Rossant (2001) Stem Cells 19, p477-82 Yamanaka et al, (2006). Developmental Dynamics 235, p2301-2314 Katsuyoshi and Hamada, (2012) Development 139, p3-14 Lecture 4 and 5 Arnold and Robertson (2009) Nature reviews Molecular cellular biology, 10, p91-103 Robb and Tam (2004) Seminars in Cell and Developmental biology 15, p43-54 Hayashi et al (2007) Science 316, p394-396. Hashimoto and Hamada (2010) , Curr Opin Genet Dev 20, p433-7

Hanna et al (2010) Cell 143, p508-525. Yamanaka and Blau (2010) Nature 465, p704-712

Reading list

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New innovations in ES cell manipulation(optional if time permits)

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ZFN, TALEN and CrispR/cas systems;

Genetic manipulation in mouse;

• Cys2-His2 zinc finger domain contacts 3bp of sequence in major groove with varying levels of selectivity.

• Can use as modular component to get sequence specific targeting of Fokl restriction endonuclease monomer. Cleavage requires targeting second monomer to other strand to generate functional Fokl dimer.

• Provides substrate for error prone repair or HR

using recombinant DNA template for custom modification.

• TALE effector proteins secreted by Xanthomonas bacteria in order to activate host plant gene expression that aids infection.

• Modular composition of sequence specific binding domains comprising 33-34 amino acids with positions 12 and 13 being highly variable.

• Can be used to construct designer Transcription Activator Like Effector Nuclease (TALEN) to introduce DNA breaks at defined target sequence.

• Provides substrate for error prone repair or HR using recombinant DNA template for custom modification.

Page 25: Lecture 1 Overview of early mouse development and methodology nb reading list is at end of notes for this lecture.

• RNA mediated bacterial defense against viral or plasmid DNA.

• Type II system adapted for genome engineering in many organisms.

• Can use cas9 intrinsic nuclease to introduce ds break or ss nick.

• Provides substrate for error prone repair or HR using recombinant DNA template for custom modification.

• Can also mutate directly by injection into zygote.

• Partially circumvents requirement for highly recombinogenic cell such as ES cell.

ZFN, TALEN and CrispR/cas systems;

Genetic manipulation in mouse;

PAM site

(Trans-encoded CRISPR RNA)