Abstract
Zebrafish have been a foundational model organism for studying the spatio-temporal activity of genes and their regulatory sequences. A variety of approaches are currently available for editing genes and modifying gene expression in zebrafish including RNAi, Cre/lox, and CRISPR-Cas9. However, the lac operator-repressor system, a component of the E. Coli lac operon, has been adapted for use in many other species to study the inducible modulation of gene expression, but has not previously been shown to function in zebrafish. Here we demonstrate that the lac operator-repressor system robustly decreases expression of firefly luciferase in cultured zebrafish fibroblast cells. Our work establishes the lac operator-repressor system as a promising tool for the manipulation of gene expression in whole zebrafish. Additionally we show the first evidence that the cytomegalovirus (CMV) enhancer is active in zebrafish cells and enhances eGFP expression ubiquitously in zebrafish embryos. Our results lay the groundwork for the development of lac-based reporter assays in zebrafish, and add to the tools available for investigating dynamic gene expression in embryogenesis. We believe that this work will catalyze the development of new reporter assay systems to investigate uncharacterized regulatory elements and their cell-type specific activities.
Introduction
Experimental approaches for the study of transcriptional regulation by cis-regulatory elements in vivo require methods for both genetically modifying cells or organisms and for measuring expression levels of specific genes. Zebrafish (Danio rerio) is an ideal model organism for investigating the spatio-temporal-specific regulation of gene expression throughout the developing embryo as it satisfies the requirements for ease of genetic manipulation and expression readout. Microinjection of DNA into fertilized embryos allows for simple and effective delivery of genome-modification tools, such as Tol2 transposons, that mediate genomic integration of constructed expression cassettes. Additionally, the transparency of zebrafish embryos facilitates the observation of fluorescent signal from reporter genes within live cells and tissue. Due to its benefits as a model organism, many technologies for studying gene function have been developed in zebrafish, including Cre/Lox1, tamoxifen-inducible Cre2, the Tet-On system3, RNAi4,5, and more recently, CRISPR based-methods6. However, the use of the lac operator-repressor system, a tool which can function transiently and more readily in a native context with minimal disruption of local regulation, has yet to be demonstrated in zebrafish.
The lac operator-repressor system is an inducible repression system established from studies of the lac operon in Escherichia coli (E. coli) that regulates lactose transport and metabolism7. The Lac repressor (LacI) binds specifically to a lac operator sequence (lacO), inhibiting the lac promoter and lac operon expression through steric hindrance8. Addition of the allosteric inhibitor Isopropyl β-d-1-thiogalactopyranoside (IPTG) to cells frees the lac operon to express its associated gene by inhibiting the binding of LacI to lacO sequences. The use of IPTG with the lac operator-repressor allows for inducible reversal of transcriptional repression.
Since its discovery in prokaryotes, the lac operator-repressor system has been modified for use in eukaryotic organisms to study the regulation of gene transcription8–11. Experiments in mammalian cell lines from mouse, monkey, and human8–10,12, as well as in whole mouse13, demonstrate the utility of the lac operator-repressor system. It has also successfully been applied in cell lines and whole organisms of the amphibian axolotl, suggesting that this system can be utilized in a wide range of organisms14. Modifications to the lac operator-repressor system has allowed for output that can be assessed visually10,12, and to study both gene repression and activation15,16, emphasizing its flexibility for studying gene expression dynamics. The ability of IPTG to relieve repression in the lac system makes it a more adaptable tool for studying the temporal dynamics of gene expression compared to constitutively active or repressed reporter gene systems.
In this paper, we provide evidence that the lac operator-repressor system can function in the zebrafish fibroblast cell line PAC2 adding a versatile new tool for the study of zebrafish genetics and transcriptional regulation. We also demonstrate that the strong cytomegalovirus (CMV) enhancer is active in PAC2 cells and in whole zebrafish, which was previously unreported in this model organism. The results in a zebrafish cell line strongly support the potential of the lac operator-repressor system to function in whole zebrafish.
Methods
Plasmid design
CMV luciferase plasmids were generated by restriction digestion to insert a CMV enhancer and a minimal SV40 promoter, or only a minimal SV40 promoter, upstream of a luciferase reporter molecule in the context of a pGL3 plasmid (Promega, E1751). Plasmids designed for whole zebrafish injection were generated by replacing the firefly luciferase reporter with an enhanced green fluorescent protein (eGFP) reporter, and adding flanking minimal Tol2 200 base pair 5’ sequence and 150 base pair 3’ sequence for integration into the genome17.
Lac operator-repressor system plasmids were created using the EMMA golden gate assembly method18. All plasmids assembled using EMMA have a backbone consisting of an ampicillin resistance gene and a high-copy-number ColE1/pMB1/pBR322/pUC origin of replication. Backbone elements are denoted by terminating dotted lines in all plasmid schematics (Fig. 1, Fig. 2, Sup. Fig. 1, Sup. Fig. 2). The EMMA toolkit was a gift from Yizhi Cai (Addgene kit # 1000000119)18. The lacI CDS and C-terminal NLS were cloned from the Addgene plasmid pKG215 and inserted into an EMMA entry vector to create an EMMA part. pKG215 was a gift from Iain Cheeseman (Addgene plasmid # 45110)19. A frameshift mutation was introduced by inserting an adenosine in the fourth codon of lacI to create a non-functional LacI (NFLacI) for use in control experiments. The LacI-expressing module contains a minimal SV40 promoter, the lacI gene, and a SV40 polyA tail, with or without the addition of an upstream CMV enhancer (Fig. 2). The repressible reporter plasmid includes a CMV enhancer and a minimal SV40 promoter upstream of a firefly luciferase gene with symmetric lac operators inserted in its 5’UTR, terminated by a SV40 polyA tail. In order to maximize repression activity, six copies of the lac operators containing the sequence AATTGTGAGCGCTCACAATT were utilized in this study. This sequence is the “symmetric” lac operator that possesses tighter binding with LacI than the canonical lac operator sequences15.
Cell culture
The zebrafish fibroblast cell line PAC2 was maintained as previously reported20. Cells were grown at 28 degrees Celsius in Leibovitz’s L-15 +glutamine Medium (Invitrogen, 21083027) containing 15% heat inactivated fetal bovine serum (FBS; Sigma-Aldrich, F4135-500ML) and 1% antibiotic-antimycotic (Corning, MT30004CI) until confluent. Confluent cells were washed with 1x phosphate buffered saline (PBS; Invitrogen, 10010023) and detached from the plate with 0.05% Trypsin-EDTA for 5 minutes (Invitrogen, 25300054). Trypsin was quenched with FBS supplemented Leibovitz’s L-15 Medium and detached cells were distributed into sterile flasks with fresh media.
Electroporation and luciferase reporter assay
To assess the activity of CMV enhancer in zebrafish cell culture, 4000ng of firefly luciferase expressing plasmids either with or without the CMV enhancer were transfected into 2×106 PAC2 cells via electroporation (Fig. 1A). 100ng of the renilla luciferase expressing plasmid (pRL-SV40 Promega, E2231) was included as a transfection control. Firefly/renilla luciferase signal was calculated as the mean of ratios of three technical replicates per biological replicate. Fold change was then calculated relative to the signal of the SV40 promoter-only containing plasmid. The mean of fold-changes is reported and error bars represent standard error.
To test the functionality of our dual module lac repressor system in zebrafish cell culture, 2000ng repressible module and 2000ng of LacI-expressing plasmid were co-transfected into 2×106 PAC2 cells by electroporation. 400ng of pRL-SV40 was included as a transfection control (Fig. 2).
All transfections were completed using 2mM cuvettes (Bulldog Bio, 12358-346) and electroporated using a NEPA21 Electroporator (Nepagene). Cells were harvested from culture and resuspended in 90uL of Opti-MEM Reduced Serum Medium (ThermoFisher, 31985062) per 1×106 cells. Mastermixes of cells and DNA were prepared according to scale of conditions, and distributed into cuvettes (100uL/cuvette, 10uL of DNA and 90uL of cells). Poring pulse for PAC2 cells was set to the following: 200V, Length 5ms, Interval 50ms, Number of pulses 2, D rate% 10, Polarity +. Poring pulse for K562 was set to the following: 275V, Length 5ms, Interval 50 ms, Number of pulses 1, D rate 10%, Polarity +. For both cell types, the transfer pulse conditions were set to the following: 20V, Pulse length 50ms, Pulse interval 50ms, number of pulses 5, D rate 40%, Polarity +/−. Immediately following electroporation, each cuvette was recovered in 900μL of appropriate media and distributed into a well on a 24-well culture plate. For the transfection in Figure 2, PAC2 cells were recovered in 6-well plates. Each condition had a total of 3 biological replicates. For experiments including LacI, IPTG was treated as a separate condition and added to 1mM final concentration, unless otherwise specified, at 1 hour and 24 hours post-transfection (Sup. Fig. 1).
Luciferase results were collected 48 hours post-transfection on a GloMax-Multi+ Detection System (Promega, E7081) using the Promega Dual-Glo Luciferase Assay System (Promega, E2940).
Zebrafish microinjections
Microinjections were carried out using the Tol2 transposon system as previously described17. Zebrafish embryos were co-injected within 30 minutes of fertilization in the single-cell stage with Tol2 mRNA, the experimental plasmid, and phenol red for visualization. All embryos were maintained in Holt buffer and fluorescent activity assessed at 24, 48, and 72 hours.
Results
The CMV enhancer is functional in zebrafish
The CMV enhancer and promoter are frequently used in reporter vector construction across a wide range of studies due to their strong and constitutive promotion of gene expression. Though the CMV promoter is commonly used in zebrafish, the functionality of the CMV enhancer has yet to be reported in this model organism10. In order to test the function of the CMV enhancer in PAC2 cells, it was inserted upstream of a minimal SV40 promoter driving luciferase expression in a pGL3 plasmid. Relative luciferase output of the CMV-enhanced SV40 pGL3 plasmid was compared to a pGL3 plasmid containing only a minimal SV40 promoter. The CMV enhancer was able to drive a 24-fold increase in luciferase expression compared to the promoter-only control, suggesting that CMV is able to function as a strong enhancer in PAC2 zebrafish fibroblast cells (Fig. 1A).
To explore if the CMV enhancer was able to enhance reporter expression in whole zebrafish, the Tol2 transposon system was utilized to integrate eGFP-expressing test plasmids into zebrafish embryos. As in PAC2 cells, two constructs were evaluated; one containing a CMV enhancer upstream of a minimal promoter driving eGFP reporter expression, and one with only a minimal SV40 promoter. While no detectable level of eGFP activity in the promotor-only control was observed (Fig. 1B), composite brightfield and GFP images of 24, 48 and 72 hours post-fertilization embryos injected with the CMV enhancer construct show ubiquitous eGFP expression (Fig. 1C). This non-cell type specific pattern of expression has been previously observed for the CMV enhancer in human cell lines21.
The lac operator-repressor system is functional in the PAC2 zebrafish cell line
In order to test the lac operator-repressor system, a repressible reporter plasmid containing 6 lac operators in the 5’UTR of the firefly luciferase gene and a LacI-expressing plasmid were co-transfected into zebrafish PAC2 cells. When a plasmid expressing a non-functional LacI (NFLacI) gene was co-transfected, no repression was observed (Fig. 2), whereas a plasmid expressing CMV enhancer-driven levels of LacI resulted in ~65% repression. An intermediate level of repression (~40%) was observed when LacI was expressed from a plasmid containing only a SV40 minimal promoter, indicating that the extent of repression correlates with LacI levels in the cell. Addition of IPTG to the cells resulted in full relief of repression in all cases. This indicates that LacI is responsible for repression of luciferase expression in these cells.
This level of repression was then compared to the K562 human cell line where the lac operator-repressor system has been previously demonstrated. When comparing both cell types co-transfected with the same plasmid mixture, the performance of the lac operator-repressor system was nearly identical in both PAC2 and K562 cells (Sup. Fig. 2). Both PAC2 and K562 cell showed ~60-65% repression when co-transfected with ~500ng of CMV enhancer-driven LacI-expressing plasmid, and ~10-20% repression when co-transfected with ~500ng of SV40 promoter-only driven LacI-expressing plasmid. These results demonstrate that the lac operator-repressor system functions in PAC2 cells similarly to human K562 cells.
Discussion
Zebrafish are a commonly used model organism for studying the spatio-temporal dynamics of cis-regulatory element activity and gene function. However, the lac operator-repressor system, which is a widely used flexible tool for these studies in other organisms, has previously been untested in zebrafish. Here we demonstrate that the lac operator-repressor system functions in zebrafish cells. Moreover, this system behaves consistently with its activity observed in other eukaryotic systems.
In our development of the lac operator system in zebrafish, it was also important to demonstrate the activity of a ubiquitous enhancer. The CMV enhancer is routinely used to drive strong, constitutive gene expression. We provide quantitative evidence that the CMV enhancer robustly increases luciferase gene expression over a promoter-only control plasmid in zebrafish fibroblasts. Furthermore, we observed strong, ubiquitous eGFP signal in fertilized zebrafish eggs that persisted 72 hours post-fertilization after integration of a CMV enhancer controlled SV40-eGFP reporter construct. These strong levels of expression are important in whole-organism studies where only a small number of cells may be expressing a reporter gene, and a high level of expression from a ubiquitous enhancer such as CMV may facilitate their detection.
We demonstrate that the changes in expression of the repressor protein LacI are inversely related to changes in the reporter expression. Importantly, this response appears to provide a level of repression directly related to the level of LacI rather than functioning as an on/off switch. This property will allow for a more nuanced measure of lac regulatory control. Upon the addition of IPTG, we are able to recover luciferase signal to the levels of a non-functional LacI control, indicating that robust repression is completely reversible at low concentrations of IPTG. The strong response to IPTG treatment, as well as minimal toxicity in a zebrafish cell line, suggest the lac operator-repressor system is a viable tool for use in whole zebrafish.
Lac operator-repressor systems can be used to control endogenous gene expression without interrupting native regulatory processes as lacO sites can be inserted in benign regions such as introns and UTRs. Transcriptional inhibition of RNA polymerase by steric hindrance can achieve repression without introducing artificial modifications to the locus and causing prolonged alterations in regulatory behavior. This is in contrast to other systems that achieve transcriptional control by tethering a protein domain with activating or silencing effects through chromatin modifying or other endogenous mechanisms. Although inducible expression can be achieved by the Tet-related systems, they also require that a special promoter be inserted, whereas lac operator-repressor systems can achieve the same result by inserting lac operators strategically, as demonstrated by the REMOTE-control system15. Crucially, this system now allows for time-controlled experiments, where a reporter gene is repressed only for a limited time window, making it a strong tool for replicating the restriction of gene expression during development.
Competing Interests
The authors declare that they have no competing interests.
Acknowledgements
This work was supported by the Alfred P. Sloan Foundation [FG-2015-65465] and the National Human Genome Research Institute [R00HG007356]. We thank Dr. Anthony Antonellis for the use of his zebrafish facilities, Dr. John Moran for the use of his plate reader, and Dr. Shigeki Iwase for the use of his Nepagene21 electroporator system.