PT - JOURNAL ARTICLE AU - Victor A. S. Jones AU - Madeline Bucher AU - Elizabeth A. Hambleton AU - Annika Guse TI - Microinjection to deliver protein, mRNA, and DNA into zygotes of the cnidarian endosymbiosis model <em>Aiptasia</em> sp. AID - 10.1101/187278 DP - 2017 Jan 01 TA - bioRxiv PG - 187278 4099 - http://biorxiv.org/content/early/2017/10/26/187278.short 4100 - http://biorxiv.org/content/early/2017/10/26/187278.full AB - Reef-building corals depend on an intracellular symbiosis with photosynthetic dinoflagellates for their survival in nutrient-poor oceans. Symbionts are phagocytosed by coral larvae from the environment and transfer essential nutrients to their hosts. Aiptasia, a small tropical marine sea anemone, is emerging as a tractable model system for coral symbiosis; however, to date functional tools and genetic transformation are lacking. Here we have established an efficient workflow to collect Aiptasia eggs for in vitro fertilization and microinjection as the basis for experimental manipulations in the developing embryo and larvae. We demonstrate that protein, mRNA, and DNA can successfully be injected into live Aiptasia zygotes to label actin with recombinant Lifeact-eGFP protein; to label nuclei and cell membranes with NLS-eGFP and farnesylated mCherry translated from injected mRNA; and to transiently drive transgene expression from an Aiptasia-specific promoter, respectively, in embryos and larvae. These proof-of-concept approaches pave the way for future functional studies of development and symbiosis establishment in Aiptasia, a powerful model to unravel the molecular mechanisms underlying intracellular coral-algal symbiosis.Summary Statement Toolkit extension: development of microinjection for cellular labelling, expression of exogenous genes and live imaging in Aiptasia, an emerging model for intracellular coral-algal symbiosis.