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Department of Veterinary Basic Sciences, Royal Veterinary College, Royal College Street, London NW1 0TU, UK
(Requests for offprints should be addressed to I M McGonnell; Email: imcgonnell{at}rvc.ac.uk)
| Abstract |
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| Introduction |
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| Endocrine disrupters |
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| Endocrine function in the zebrafish |
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The hypothalamus
The hypothalamus acts as an endocrine gland in parallel with the pituitary gland. It develops from the ventral diencephalic region of the developing forebrain. Relatively few studies have investigated hypothalamic development in fish; however, a study by Mathieu et al.(2002) demonstrated that the prechordal plate plays a major role in hypothalamic development in the zebrafish. In contrast, the anterior endoderm plays this role in mammals.
The role of the hypothalamus can be divided broadly into two. The first is to release oxytocin and vasopressin into the bloodstream via the posterior pituitary. In fish, these hormones are called isotocin and vasotocin respectively. The second is to produce releasing factors (at least six), which in turn provoke the anterior pituitary to release hormones into the bloodstream. As modern teleosts lack a portal system, this is achieved through projecting axons that release these factors. Of these, gonadotrophin-releasing factor (GnRH) has been particularly well studied in fish due to the economic and ecological requirements for optimal breeding. There are thought to be three genes coding for GnRH isoforms in teleosts; however, zebrafish appear to only have two (Sherwood & Wu 2005). The majority of mammals also have two GnRH genes (Morgan & Millar 2004). As in mammals, they induce release of luteinising hormone (LH) and follicle-stimulating hormone (FSH) at different stages of maturation (reviewed in Ando & Urano 2005). In fish, as in other non-mammalian vertebrates, corticotrophin-releasing factor (CRF) stimulates not only corticotrophin release from the pituitary but also thyrotrophin release (Seasholtz et al. 2002). Thyrotrophin-releasing hormone (TRH) regulates both thyrotrophin and prolactin (PRL) release from the pituitary in mammals. It has been shown also to control growth hormone (GH) synthesis (Kagabu et al. 1998) and adrenocorticotrophic hormone (ACTH) secretion (Rotllant et al. 2000, 2001) in teleosts. In fish, growth hormone releasing-hormone (GHRH) and pituitary adenylate cyclase-activating polypeptide (PACAP) are coded for by one gene. In contrast, in mammals, they are coded for by two separate genes. Zebrafish PACAP sequence is highly conserved in mammals, but GHRH is much less conserved (Fradinger & Sherwood 2000). Zebrafish have duplicates, GRF-PACAP 1 (Fradinger & Sherwood 2000) and GRF-PACAP 2, the latter of which plays a role in oocyte maturation (Wang et al. 2003). Teleost PRL-releasing peptide (PrRP) has relatively low sequence homology to the human, but it is expressed in the hypothalamus and releases PRL from the pituitary. PrRP may also act to reduce levels of GH release, as seen in rats (Sakamoto et al. 2003).
In general, teleost hypothalamic hormones appear to have similar activities to mammalian equivalents. However, the additional roles found in some studies may point to a more complex system in the fish.
The pituitary
To date, the majority of work performed to elucidate developmental and functional aspects of the anterior pituitary has relied on mouse models and a range of human genetic abnormalities. Through these studies, an increasingly comprehensive plan of anterior pituitary development has been created, which involves considerable transcriptional regulation and signalling gradients of growth factors, leading to the spatial and temporal regulation of the endocrine lineages (for reviews, see Burgess et al. 2002, Scully & Rosenfeld 2002, Zhu et al. 2005). However, a reverse genetics approach to delineate the role of these transcription factors and signalling molecules in mice is often compromised by the early lethality of these models in utero, making phenotypic analysis almost impossible. The flexibility that the zebrafish offers in analysis of gene function makes it an attractive primary model for determining the process of pituitary organogenesis. For this reason, pituitary development is well studied in the zebrafish. The mature zebrafish anterior pituitary comprises the same five endocrine lineages expressed in the mammalian pituitary, although the sequence of their development is altered. Lactotrophs are the last endocrine lineage cell type to be expressed in mammals, yet they are the first lineage to differentiate in zebrafish (Herzog et al. 2003). In addition, there are key differences to the mammalian anterior pituitary in the morphogenesis and patterning within the zebrafish adenohypophysis. Specifically, whereas the mammalian anterior pituitary is derived from an invagination of the oral ectoderm, Rathkes pouch, no such invagination occurs in zebrafish; instead, the anterior pituitary remains in a subepithelial position (Herzog et al. 2003). An additional structural difference is that the endocrine lineages are aligned anteroposteriorly (Herzog et al. 2003, 2004b) in contrast to dorsoventrally in the mammalian adenohypophysis (Dasen & Rosenfeld 1999).
Although obvious differences between mammalian and fish pituitary organogenesis exist, patterning seems well conserved. In mice, models have delineated a critical role for differentiating growth factors such as fibroblast growth factors (FGFs), bone morphogenetic proteins (BMPs) and the signalling molecule Sonic hedgehog (shh) (Dasen & Rosenfeld 1999, Sbrogna et al. 2003, Zhu et al. 2005). These same molecules are also critical to anterior pituitary development in zebrafish. For example, loss of Fgf3 function severely impairs zebrafish anterior pituitary development, resulting in loss of expression of pituitary hormones (Herzog et al. 2004a). Of further interest is the commonality between mammalian pituitary endocrine disorders and observed pituitary phenotypes in zebrafish mutants. For example, mutations in Pit1, which cause dwarfism in both mice (Li et al. 1990) and man (Pfaffle et al. 1992, Radovick et al. 1992, Tatsumi et al. 1992), are phenocopied in zebrafish Pit1 mutants, particularly in their lack of somatotrophs, lactotrophs and thyrotrophs (Li et al. 1990, Nica et al. 2004). However, consistent with the early appearance of lactotrophs, zebrafish Pit1 is also necessary for the expression of pituitary PRL.
Hormones performing the same or similar functions to mammalian pituitary hormones are expressed in the relevant endocrine lineages in zebrafish. In common with other fish, D. rerio express somatolactin (SL) as well as GH and PRL. Two isoforms, SL
and SLß, have recently been cloned, SL
being more conserved with the majority of fish SL
genes, while SLß shares homology with the more divergent goldfish SL (Zhu et al. 2004). PRL expression occurs earlier in zebrafish than mammals, where lactotrophs are the last endocrine lineage to develop. This suggests alternative roles for PRL in D. rerio, and this is supported by the fact that most pit1 mutant zebrafish die at 78 days post-fertilisation (dpf) (Nica et al. 2004), whereas mouse and human pit1 mutants are viable. SL has potential roles in regulating calcium metabolism, the stress response and acidbase balance in fish (Kakizawa et al. 1993), whereas PRL may perform important regulatory roles in freshwater adaptation by regulating cell proliferation and apoptosis (Sakamoto et al. 2005).
The zebrafish tshß homologue is detected by 42 hpf, immediately before gh expression (Herzog et al. 2003). Developmentally, the onset of expression is reversed in zebrafish compared with their mammalian counterparts. The localisation of tshß- and gh-expressing cells reveals that the majority of somatotrophs and thyrotrophs reside within the middle of the three regions that make up the mature anterior pituitary in zebrafish. The thyrotroph population are particularly susceptible to the effects of pit1 mutations, in that all thyrotrophs are lost (Herzog et al. 2004b), whereas only caudomedial thyrotrophs are lost in mouse models (Lin et al. 1993). This, perhaps, reflects the difference in when thyrotroph lineage cells arise in mice and zebrafish.
At least two POMC genes are expressed in zebrafish, which encode for ACTH, lipotrophin (
-LPH), melanocyte stimulating hormone (ß-MSH) and ß-endorphin (Gonzalez-Nunez et al. 2003, Herzog et al. 2004b). In transgenic studies, corticotroph ontogeny was traced by driving expression of GFP with the zebrafish POMC promoter and revealed expression of POMC-GFP in bilateral groups anterior to the neural ridge midline at 1820 h post-fertilisation (hpf) (Liu et al. 2003). These corticotroph lineage cells responded appropriately to dexamethasone treatment, which selectively expressed POMC-GFP by 2 dpf (Liu et al. 2003).
The cloning of zebrafish gonadotrophins has, until recently, been only partially completed. Nica et al.(2004) cloned a zebrafish homologue of the
gsu and found two distinct populations of cells; those that coexpressed pit1 (presumptive thyrotrophs) and those that did not (presumptive gonadotrophs). Most recently, the D. rerio genes for the gonadotrophins have been cloned (So et al. 2005). Two LH isoforms (lhß1 and lhß2), fshß and GTH
sequences were cloned, and their distribution was restricted to the pituitary, testis and ovaries. Sequence homology of LH and
GSU with other fish species is reasonably high (~70%), but less conserved for FSH (3764%) (So et al. 2005). In mammals, one of the key transcription factors responsible for the differentiation of gonadotroph lineage cells is steroidogenic factor-1 (SF-1), an ftz-f1 homologue. Zebrafish express two ftz-f1 homologues, zFF1 and ff1b, which are expressed at high levels in the pituitary and hypothalamus (von Hofsten et al. 2001). The zFF1 transcript also shares considerable homology with another closely related transcription factor, liver receptor homologue-1 (LRH-1), suggesting that the two ftz-f1 homologues in zebrafish can perform roles similar to both SF-1 and LRH-1. However, it remains to be elucidated as to whether LRH-1-like functions are required in the pituitary.
What is clear from this growing area of research is that, despite some notable exceptions, pituitary organogenesis and function in zebrafish are closely conserved with other vertebrates, making them an ideal system in which to dissect the role of specific pathways involved in pituitary development and function.
The parathyroid gland
The parathyroid gland detects levels of serum extracellular calcium via the calcium-sensing receptor. Low levels of calcium provoke the production and secretion of parathyroid hormone from the gland, which then acts to release calcium from stores in bone, reduce excretion from the kidney and increase absorption in the gut (Hogan et al. 2005). The parathyroid gland and parathyroid hormone are found in all tetrapods (land-dwelling vertebrates). However, fish do not possess a parathyroid gland, and there is a widespread belief that fish do not produce parathyroid hormone because of the different needs for calcium homeostasis in the aquatic environment. Calcium is abundant in water and is readily absorbed by fish, negating the need for storage. Despite this, fish do regulate plasma calcium levels, and in keeping with this, several recent studies have indicated that members of different groups of fish zebrafish and puffer fish (both teleosts or bony fish) and dogfish (a Chondrichthyes or cartilaginous fish) not only possess two parathyroid hormone genes (PTH 1 and 2) (Danks et al. 2003, Gensure et al. 2004, Hogan et al. 2004, Okabe & Graham 2004) but also produce active peptides (Danks et al. 2003, Gensure et al. 2004). Both the parathyroid hormone and the calcium sensing receptor gene are expressed not in a parathyroid gland but in the gills of adult fish (Okabe & Graham 2004). Gills are known to play a role in sensing/regulating calcium levels. Both the gills and the parathyroid gland are derived from the same embryonic tissue-pharyngeal pouch endoderm in the developing head, and require the Gcm2 gene for their development (Hogan et al. 2004, Okabe & Graham 2004). This suggests that, while fish do not possess a parathyroid gland, the gill is a homologous structure and fulfils the same function by producing parathyroid hormone, making the zebrafish a suitable model for the study of parathyroid hormone function.
The thyroid
The thyroid gland in the adult zebrafish is not a compact structure encapsulated in connective tissue, but rather a loose aggregation of follicles, close to the ventral aorta, distributed between the first gill and the heart (Wendl et al. 2002). Despite this, it develops from the same tissue as the thyroid in mammals the endodermal tissue in the pharynx (Wendl et al. 2002) indicating that they are homologous structures. Similarly, the genes involved in early development and patterning of the thyroid gland are well conserved between zebrafish and mouse (Rohr & Concha 2000, Wendl et al. 2002, Elsalini et al. 2003).
Zebrafish thyroid follicles produce thyroxine (T4) and tri-iodothyronine (T3), and two types of receptor-TR
and ß have been identified (Essner et al. 1997, Liu et al. 2000), with high sequence homology to other vertebrate TR
and ß receptors. As in mammals, thyroid hormone (TH) and thyroid hormone receptors (TRs) are required for correct growth and development in embryos and larval stages (Brown 1997, Power et al. 2001, Liu & Chan 2002) and also the transition from larval to juvenile stages (Brown 1997, Liu & Chan 2002) the failure of this transition is a common problem in aquaculture of fish. In addition to its role as a model for the mammalian thyroid, the economic and conservation benefits of manipulating the thyroid function in fish are clear.
The adrenal gland
The teleost (bony fish) group to which zebrafish belong do not possess a distinct adrenal gland, but rather an intermingled group of cells sited in the anterior kidney that produce either catecholamines or steroid hormones (Gallo & Civinini 2003). The cells producing steroid hormone are referred to as the interrenals. The interrenal cells produce cortisol, which regulates both metabolism and electrolyte balance. In contrast, in terrestrial vertebrates, mineralocorticoids regulate electrolyte balance (Wendelaar Bonga 1997). As with all vertebrates, the catecholamine-producing cells are derived from embryonic neural crest cells (Reid et al. 1995), while the interrenals are derived from mesoderm (Chai et al. 2003). However, little is known about the molecular mechanisms that control inter-renal development in fish and how this compares to the mammalian adrenal gland (Chai et al. 2003).
As in other vertebrates, cortisol is produced in teleosts as a response to stress (Wendelaar Bonga 1997, Gallo & Civinini 2003), and secretion is stimulated by ACTH. In contrast to the mammalian system, cortisol secretion can also be stimulated by MSH from the pituitary (Mommsen 1999). Interrenal cells in teleosts also produce androgens (Vermeulen et al. 1994), the hormone group that can induce both oocyte maturation (Nagahama 1997) and spermiation (Todo et al. 2000) in teleosts.
The pancreas
Pancreatic development is well studied in the zebrafish model. As with mammals, it consists of both an endocrine component (the principal islet) and exocrine (parenchyma) component (Argenton et al. 1999). While molecular events appear highly conserved between zebrafish and mammals (e.g. Milewski et al. 1998, Huang et al. 2001a, Yee et al. 2001, Stafford et al. 2004, Kim et al. 2006), there are subtle differences in cellular events. The most prominent of these is that the zebrafish pancreas develops in situ from anterior endoderm cells (Ober et al. 2003, Wallace & Pack 2003), while the tetrapod pancreas forms from evagination of foregut endoderm (Pack et al. 1996).
Zebrafish genes for glucagons, insulin and somatostatin have been cloned (Milewski et al. 1998, Argenton et al. 1999, Huang et al. 2001a). There is a high level of sequence conservation with the mammalian genes, and they are expressed in pancreatic islet cells. Fish are thought to regulate blood glucose levels in the same way as mammals; that is, by glucagons and insulin (Plisetskaya & Mommsen 1996). However, there are some important differences teleosts generally exist in a state of hyperglycaemia, even though they have insulin levels comparable to or even higher than mammals (Mommsen & Plisetskaya 1991). They have a much lower rate of glucose utilisation and a higher requirement for protein. The close link between insulin and glucagon activity in mammals may not exist in teleosts (Mommsen & Plisetskaya 1991); therefore, blood glucose may not be so tightly regulated. However, these differences may reflect the variety of environmental and metabolic differences in the aquatic environment (for review, see Moon 2001). Because of their hyperglycaemia, teleosts have been proposed as a good model for both insulin-resistant and insulin-dependent diabetes (Kelley 1993, Wilson 1994).
The gonads
Steroid hormones are synthesised in and secreted from the Leydig cells of the testis and in the ovary, under the control of pituitary gonadotrophins (FSH and LH). They are required in multiple tissues for many functions, including, in the gonad itself, regulation of the reproductive cycle. Importantly in teleosts, the developing gonad has the appearance of an immature ovary until the critical period when sex steroids determine whether male or female organs develop (Piferrer 2001, Devlin & Nagahama 2002). In zebrafish, this influence begins at 43 dpf and is completed by 99 dpf (Maack & Segner 2004). Teleosts, including zebrafish, are used in the study of environmental endocrine disrupters due to this major influence of sex steroids on gonadogenesis. Steroidogenic synthesis of the major sex steroid appears to be conserved between mammals and fish (Fostier et al. 1983), although there are also fish-specific steroids, a fact indicating a more complex system. Of the major sex steroids, progesterone is the least studied in fish. It may stimulate gonadotrophin secretion from the pituitary at sexual maturation (Atteke et al. 2003), and a derivative, dihydroxy-4-pregnen-3-one (DHP), causes oocyte maturation in fish, including the zebrafish (Selman et al. 1994). Testosterone is the major androgen produced. Many teleosts have two androgen receptors (ARs) compared with the single mammalian AR. These teleost ARs have been shown to have high binding affinity for either testosterone or dihydrotestosterone, while the mammalian AR has high specificity for dihydrotestosterone (Sperry & Thomas 1999a, 1999b). Three oestrogen receptors (
, ß1 and ß2) (Bardet et al. 2002, Menuet et al. 2002) have been identified in zebrafish compared with two in mammals (
and ß) (Green et al. 1986, Kuiper et al. 1996). While their sequence is homologous, zebrafish receptors differ from mammalian counterparts in response to some oestrogens (Bardet et al. 2002), a fact that, the authors suggest, may make them a less favourable model for study of endocrine disrupters. An additional site of oestrogen synthesis in all vertebrates is neural tissue (Callard 1993). Teleosts, however, have 1001000-fold higher levels of the oestrogen-synthesising enzyme aromatase in neural tissue than mammals (Pasmanik & Callard 1985, 1988), and the activity of this enzyme is comparably high (Callard 1993, Gelinas & Callard 1993). The site of this enzyme has been located in radial glial cells in the brain (Forlano et al. 2001) that are thought to be neuroprogenitor cells. Expression studies show oestrogen receptors are expressed in the same brain regions (reviewed in Pellegrini et al. 2005). The zebrafish brain, unlike the mammalian, continues to grow during adulthood, and oestrogen may play a role in this process. Therefore, the study of oestrogen function in the brain of teleosts may have exciting possibilities for research on central nervous system neuronal repair and regeneration in mammals.
In conclusion, while developmental processes in endocrine organogenesis seem similar, particularly at the molecular level, the structure of the glands can show the greatest difference between fish and mammal. This is particularly obvious in the parathyroid/gill and adrenal/interrenal systems. Despite this, endocrine function is a well-conserved process between teleost fish and mammals, the majority of hormones, hormone receptors and activities being conserved. The main differences in function are an increase in complexity in some systems in the teleost that are of significant interest to fish biologists.
| Genetic manipulation the tools employed in zebrafish studies |
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Watching the defectives fluorescent reporter lines
Significant advances have been made in many areas of genetic and biological research by the ability to generate transgenic animals. Mice are the most popular model for transgenic manipulation, as techniques to generate them are well established. However, the use of transgenic zebrafish is gaining in popularity, particularly for imaging cell behaviour during development. In recent years, there has been an explosion in the creation of fluorescent reporter zebrafish lines, where GFP or other fluorescent protein is expressed under the regulatory sequence of a specific target gene (Lin 2000). Briefly, regulatory sequence is cloned into a GFP vector and injected into the developing embryo at the one-cell stage. These fish (F0) are allowed to develop, and then mated with wild-type fish to generate an F1 population. If the promoter GFP has integrated into the germ-line, the target tissue will fluoresce, and this can be examined easily in the embryo under a fluorescent microscope. Individuals with the strongest expression are chosen to establish the line (Udvadia & Linney 2003). This allows the spatiotemporal expression patterns of these genes to be examined, in real time in the living embryo. Additionally, they can be used as a marker for a tissue, to aid the analysis of mutant fish produced in forward and reverse gene function studies (see below and Xiao et al. 2005). Thus, lines such as insulin GFP and pdx1 GFP have been created, in which GFP is specifically expressed in the pancreas (Huang et al. 2001b), and POMC-GFP, which is expressed in the pituitary (Liu et al. 2003). These have greatly aided our understanding of both the normal development of these endocrine organs and the abnormal development in mutants. Imaging of live whole zebrafish is possible up to early larval stages (e.g. Rieger et al. 2005). The challenge is now to improve imaging after the developmental period to be able to use such lines in models of adult endocrine disease.
| Making mutant fish forward genetics |
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ENU screens
Chemical mutagens are favoured due to their high efficiency in creating point mutations in single genes in rapidly dividing premeiotic germ cells (Singer 1983). The mutagen of choice in zebrafish is N-ethyl-N-nitrosourea (ENU), as it is the most efficient in this system (Mullins & Nusslein-Volhard 1993, Mullins et al. 1994, Solnica-Krezel et al. 1994). Typically, adult males are exposed to ENU in tank water (Mullins & Nusslein-Volhard 1993) and subsequently bred with wild-type females to generate F1 founder fish. These are then either inbred or outbred with wild-type females to generate F2 families. F2s are then mated as pairs to reveal recessive mutations in the F3 generation (Solnica-Krezel et al. 1994) (Fig. 2
). Once a phenotype is generated, positional cloning techniques (Talbot & Schier 1999) and candidate gene testing are employed to identify the gene that has been mutated.
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Insertional screens
More recently, a large-scale, forward mutagenesis screen to identify developmental genes has been conducted by random insertion of a murine retroviral vector into the zebrafish genome (Amsterdam et al. 1999). The vector is injected into the embryo at a very early stage (a few cells), and the viral sequence is reverse transcribed and inserted into the cells DNA. The resulting animal is bred with a wild-type animal in a similar strategy to that described above to produce recessive mutants in the F3 generation (Fig. 2
). The efficiency of mutation is not as high as that with ENU, but the distinct advantage of this method is that mutated genes can be rapidly identified by RTPCR with primers against the viral sequence (Amsterdam et al. 1999, Amsterdam 2003). Studies have also employed this method to identify genes involved in cystic kidney disease (Sun et al. 2004) and liver disease (Sadler et al. 2005).
| Looking backward to go forward reverse genetics |
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| Knockdown, but not knockout? |
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One of the most successful techniques employed in understanding gene function in development and disease has been the loss-of-function knockout gene model. The establishment of stable, embryonic stem-cell lines from mice, in which targeted DNA insertion is possible, has allowed this technique to become routine in the mouse model. However, the generation of stable, heritable, targeted mutations in vertebrates other than mouse has been hampered by the absence of embryonic cell lines. The zebrafish is no exception to this, and there are currently no specifically targeted gene knockout or knockin lines. Cell lines that display ES characteristics have been generated in fish by feeder layer systems (Sun et al. 1995), but integration into the germ-cell lineage of the host embryo has been poor. However, recent advances in the derivation of cell lines that are germ-line competent over several passages and integrate into host embryos (Hong et al. 1998), and in which targeted DNA insertion appears possible and heritable (Ma et al. 2001, Fan et al. 2004), bring the prospect of targeted, knockout transgenic zebrafish a step closer to reality.
Knockdown success: morpholinos
In the absence of knockouts, knockdown strategies have come to the fore. The most widely used strategy is the application of morpholinos, antisense oligonucleotides in which the deoxyribose is substituted with an N-morpholin ring, conferring greater stability with fewer non-specific effects than other antisense DNA analogues (Summerton & Weller 1997, Corey & Abrams 2001). They bind to RNA and prevent translation, but, unlike other types of antisense oligos, do not make the RNA a substrate for RNase-H degradation. For this reason, morpholinos designed against the start site codon and 5' UTR of a candidate gene tend to be more effective, as they stop the translational machinery (ribosome) from binding (Heasman 2002, Malicki et al. 2002). However, this is not always the case and needs to be confirmed for each gene and morpholino. They also appear to be effective if designed against splice sites (Malicki et al. 2002). They were initially designed as clinical tools (Summerton & Weller 1997) but have rapidly become a common tool in embryology, not only in zebrafish but also in other diverse models such as frog and sea urchin (reviewed in Heasman 2002).
Designing morpholinos
Morpholinos are easily designed by simple rules they should be 25 mers, not be self-complementary, and have low guanine (G) content, with a maximum of three consecutive Gs (Malicki et al. 2002) (for further information, see www.gene-tools.com). If these rules are followed, they are readily soluble in water-based buffer such as Danieau solution (Westerfield 2000), and nanolitre volumes can be injected into the one-cell-stage embryo. Their stability ensures that their effects are long lasting. Combined with the rapid development of the zebrafish, this stability allows inhibition of translation for a large proportion of the developmental period sometimes for 4 days (Braat et al. 2001). Phenotypes are rapidly observed in injected embryos, making this technique quick and relatively cheap to employ.
Designing morpholino experiments
There are some important considerations in performing and interpreting data from morpholino studies. A doseresponse experiment is required to determine the dose at which a specific phenotype occurs and that at which toxicity occurs (as manifest, for example, by widespread cell death). It is possible that the difference between these two doses is very small. Injected morpholinos are unlikely to exhibit complete loss of function, more typically generating a graded severity of phenotype. This may be seen as a distinct advantage where complete null results in early lethality. Similarly, some are highly efficient, producing phenotype in over 90% of injected embryos, while others produce phenotype in less than 20% (reviewed in Heasman 2002).
As with all antisense experiments, effective controls must be employed. Typically, two adjacent but non-overlapping morpholinos are used to confirm that the phenotype is gene specific (Sumanas et al. 2001). Five base pair mismatched controls are also used to determine whether the phenotype produced is non-specific. The best assay to confirm the activity and specificity of the morpholino is Western blotting or immunohistochemistry both of which require a specific primary antibody. As mRNA is not degraded, RTPCR cannot be used as an assay in standard morpholino experiments, although it will detect smaller transcripts if the morpholino is directed against a splice site (Malicki et al. 2002). In the absence of an antibody, specificity can be demonstrated by rescue of the phenotype by injection of synthetic mRNA. However, this must either lack the 5'UTR sequence or have minor base-pair modification to stop morpholino binding and inactivation of the injected mRNA (Nasevicius & Ekker 2000, Cui et al. 2001).
Application of morpholinos in endocrine studies
There is now a wealth of published evidence to show the effectiveness and specificity of morpholinos in zebrafish. Their use in endocrine research is likely to predominate in developmental studies, and candidate genes that are proposed to play a role in endocrine gland development have already been examined by this system (Table 1
). For example, morpholinos against Pdx-1 were employed to demonstrate a role for this gene in endocrine pancreas formation (Huang et al. 2001a, Yee et al. 2001). Similarly, in the developing interrenal cells (adrenal gland homologue), morpholinos against ff1b (the homologue of mammalian SF-1 gene) disrupted interrenal development, downregulated expression of genes coding for steroidogenic enzymes, and impaired osmoregulation in the larval fish (Chai et al. 2003), partially phenocopying human and mouse mutations in the same gene. Injection of morpholinos targeted against the gene Pit1 resulted in loss of the lactotroph, somatotroph and thyrotrophic cells in the developing pituitary and a lack of growth in the juvenile (dwarfism) (Nica et al. 2004). Importantly, this morpholino mutant phenocopies zebrafish Pit1 mutants isolated in an ENU screen (Herzog et al. 2004b, Nica et al. 2004), mouse Pit1 mutants (Snell dwarf mouse (Li et al. 1990)) and human Pit1 mutants (combined pituitary hormone deficiencies (CPHD) (Pfaffle et al. 1992, Radovick et al. 1992, Tatsumi et al. 1992), indicating the potential for such studies in examining endocrine development and function. To contrast with this, morpholinos have also been used to demonstrate a role for the endocrine hormones GnRH, GHRH and PACAP during development (Sherwood & Wu 2005).
These studies demonstrate the validity of the morpholino system, and in view also of their cost-effectiveness and ease of use, morpholinos will be a valuable tool for deciphering both the genetic control of endocrine gland development and the developmental effects of endocrine hormones in the future.
| Gaining ground gain of function studies |
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The most common method is by injection of capped synthetic mRNA into the developing embryo. mRNA is transcribed in vitro from a DNA construct and capped to increase efficiently of translation in the developing embryo. Injection of mRNA at a concentration of 10100 µg/ml is sufficient to cause uniform expression (Malicki et al. 2002). For example, this technique has been used to assign a role for thyroid hormone receptor alpha 1 in early neural development (Essner et al. 1999) and to identify a role for the Sonic hedgehog (shh) gene in adenohypophysis development (Herzog et al. 2003).
Temporal control of overexpression is often desirable, as most developmentally important genes have multiple functions at different times of development (Malicki et al. 2002). This is now being made possible by the availability of heat-shock-inducible vectors that can be injected into the embryo; however, a potential problem may lie in the fact that such vectors show a mosaic distribution in the embryo, and thus ubiquitous and uniform overexpression may be difficult to achieve (Riley et al. 2004). Currently, inducible gene expression systems such as this are not widely used in the adult animal, and that is a distinct disadvantage to many endocrinologists.
| TILLING your way to the top |
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| Techniques for the future transposons and gene traps |
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| Conclusion |
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| References |
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