Successful ES cell culture requires great care and dedication. For a full description on how to handle ES cells for optimal growth and maintenance of pluripotency, please refer to the laboratory manual “Manipulating the mouse embryo” \(CSHL Press, 2003; Ref. 4). As with any other manipulation of ES cells for the generation of chimeric mice, previous training in general and dedicated ES cell culture techniques is required. The materials/procedures described here are the ones we routinely use for R1 ES cells and represent general guidelines. However, as different ES cell lines may have slightly different culture/handling procedures, is important that the supplying laboratory provides the necessary information together with the ES cells. For example, all the “knock-out first” alleles provided to the research community by the International Knockout Mouse Consortium; IKMC) have been generated in mouse ES cell lines derived from embryos with a C57BL/6N genetic background. We advise to exactly follow the cell line-specific protocols and culture conditions provided by EUCOMM for these ES-cell lines.
Independent of their origin, we recommend users to verify the germ-line transmission potential of the parental ES cell-line they plan to use for dRMCE or alternatively use ES cell-lines with proven germ-line transmission. This is particularly important in the case of conditional alleles generated by high-throughput approaches, as the resulting ES-cell clones may not have been characterized in great detail with respect to their germ-line transmission potential and/or karyotype. If the necessary information is not available, we recommend that minimally two independent parental ES cell lines carrying the conditional allele for the locus of choice are characterized by Southern blot analysis to verify correct targeting. In parallel, these parental ES-cell lines should be karyotyped to exclude clones with apparent chromosomal abnormalities.
In case the germ-line transmission potential is not known, we recommend the use of two independent parental ES-cell lines for parallel manipulation by dRMCE.
Detailed protocols describing the PCR, Southern blotting and other molecular techniques can be found in the appropriate molecular biology laboratory manuals such as e.g. the Current Protocols in Molecular Biology series \(Ref. 5).
CRITICAL: treat ES cells gently and maintain optimal growth conditions at all times by only using freshly prepared media, minimizing handling times and taking utmost care during trypsinizing and transfer of cells, etc. ES cells have to be cultured at relatively high density and are typically split 1:3 to 1:6 every second day onto a layer of mitotically-arrested feeder cells. Only during drug selection after electroporation are ES cells grown without feeder cells on gelatin-coated dishes. ES cells grow in dense colonies with very defined borders and should never be grown to more than 70-80% confluency; individual colonies should never touch each other. The culture media have to be changed daily. When ES cells are split, is very important to dissociate them well by gentle pipetting such that the creation of air bubbles is avoided. The quality of the single-cell suspension has to be checked under the microscope. The generation of a single cell suspension by gentle pipetting not only prevents ES cell differentiation \(and potential loss of pluripotency), but is important for preparing cells for electroporation. Sterile conditions must be assured at all times. For more details on ES cell culturing and passaging, we refer the user to the laboratory manual “Manipulating the mouse embryo” \(Ref. 4).
1. Expansion of the parental ES cell line heterozygous for the conditional allele.
Always pre-warm the media, Trypsin-EDTA \(1x) and D-PBS. ES cells must be split every two days. Make sure that a sufficient number of dishes with confluent and mitotically-arrested feeder cells are available on the day ES cells are split.
Mitotically-arrested mouse embryonic fibroblast feeder cells \(for their preparation and expansion see Ref. 4) are prepared as follows: the feeder cell medium is replaced by medium containing 10 μg/ml of Mitomycin C \(100x stock at 1 mg/ml) and the plates are incubated for 2 hours at 37°C in a tissue culture incubator. Then the Mitomycin C medium \(toxic) is removed and the plates with the firmly adhered feeder cells are washed 3 times with D-PBS \(with Mg2+/Ca2+). Add feeder cell medium and return the plates to the incubator and/or seed ES cells onto them. When using multi-well plates \(after ES-cell colony picking, see below), it is better to Mitomycin C treat the feeder cells in 10-cm tissue culture plates, trypsinize and plate them into 48 well plates after washing. One confluent 10-cm dish of feeder cells is sufficient to seed cells into all wells of one multi-well plate with 12 to 96 wells. Plates with confluent layers of Mitomycin C treated feeder cells can be used up to maximally 3 days for seeding with ES cells. Just prior to plating the ES cells, it is essential to change the feeder cell medium to ES cell medium.
Step 1.1 \(day 1): thaw one aliquot of frozen parental ES cell \(~3×106 cells/vial) into one 6-cm dish of mitotically-arrested confluent feeder cells.
Thaw the vial in a waterbath at 37°C and transfer the contents into a 15-ml tube containing 10 ml of ES cell medium. Centrifuge at 1000 rpm for 5 minutes and resuspend the pellet in 1ml ES cell medium and plate onto the 6-cm dish containing already 3ml of ES cell medium.
Step 1.2 \(day 2): check the cells under the microscope and refresh the medium.
Step 1.3 \(day 3): passage the cells from a 6-cm to a 10-cm dish.
Wash the plate with 2 ml Trypsin-EDTA \(1x, do not use any other type of Trypsin – for details see reagent list). Replace with 1.5 ml of Trypsin-EDTA \(1x) and return to the incubator for 15 minutes at 37°C. Tap the plate gently and pipette the ES cells up and down 5-7 times with a 2 ml pipette. Check the single cell status under a microscope. Add 4 ml of ES cell medium and pipette 2-3 more times using a 5 ml pipette. Return the dish to the incubator for 15 minutes. This will allow the feeder cells to re-attach and allow transfer of the ES cells without carrying over too many feeder cells. Transfer the ES cells by gently swirling the dish and collecting the 4.5 ml ES cell medium into a 15-ml tube. Centrifuge the cells \(see step 1.1) and resuspend the pellet in 2ml of ES cell medium. Plate the harvested ES cells into one 10-cm dish with mitotically-arrested feeder cells and 8 ml of ES cell medium. In case the ES cell in the original 6-cm dish have grown almost to 80% confluency, then it may be necessary to split the cells into two 10-cm dishes \(at 1:3 to 1:6 ratios).
Step 1.4 \(day 4): monitor the cells for potential confluency and colony morphology. Refresh the medium.
Step 1.5 \(day 5): split the cells onto four to six 10-cm dishes with feeder cells \(at 1:4 to 1:6 ratios). For details see step 1.3, resuspend the cells in 7ml ES cell medium for plating.
Step 1.6 \(day 6): monitor the cells and refresh the medium. The electroporation will be done the next day.
2. Electroporation.
Typical electroporation conditions for ES cells are 0.24 kV and 475 μF \(high capacitance) using the Biorad Gene Pulser II system. About 1.5×107 cells in 0.8ml D-PBS are used per 0.4-cm cuvette. As rule of thumb, one about 70% confluent 10-cm dish provides enough ES cells for one cuvette. Grow always 1-2 additional dishes to ensure that sufficient amounts of ES cells are available on the day of electroporation.
EXPERIMENTAL DESIGN:
Experimental cuvette 1: ES cells \(1.5×107) +pDIRE \(50 μg), + replacement vector \(50 μg). In general, a single cuvette is enough per replacement construct when using dRMCE.
Control cuvette: ES cells \(1.5×107) + pDIRE \(50 μg).
Optional: Control 2 \(no DNA) and Control 3 \(no electroporation). These controls are in general not needed as they mainly serve to monitor the performance of the electroporator or the quality of the media.
Step 2.1: trypsinize enough 10-cm dishes of approximately 70% confluent ES cells \(for details see step 1.3 and 1.5).
CRITICAL: assure that ES cells form a single-cell suspension. If necessary, pipette them further in the Trypsin-EDTA \(1x) solution using a 2-ml pipette \(maximally 12 times in total).
TIP: prepare enough 10-cm dishes coated with 0.1% gelatin during the trypsinization step. Cover the surface of the tissue culture dishes with the gelatin solution, incubate them for 5 minutes at room temperature and then aspirate the solution. Leave the plates to dry in the hood for 10 minutes.
Step 2.2: Collect the ES cells after 10 min adherence to remove feeder cells \(as described in step 1.3). Take great care not to transfer too many feeder cells. Pool the ES cell suspensions from various dishes in 50-ml tubes. Make sure the ES cell suspension is homogeneous and transfer a 100 μl aliquot into a 1.5-ml tube containing 0.9 ml of ES cell medium \(1/10 dilution). Count the cells and calculate the total amount of ES cells in each 50 ml-tube.
TIP: take care to not let the cells re-adhere for too long as otherwise a significant fraction of the ES cells will be lost.
Step 2.3: Centrifuge the ES cells at 1000 rpm for 10 minutes. Resuspend the pellet in D-PBS \(without Mg2+/Ca2+- this is crucial) at a final concentration of 1.875×107 cells per ml, which corresponds to 1.5×107 cells in 0.8ml D-PBS.
TIP: during the centrifugation step, open and label the cuvettes. Pipette the appropriate amount of DNA into each cuvette. Prepare a bucket with ice.
Step 2.4: add 0.8ml \(1.5×107) ES cell suspension to each DNA-containing cuvette using a 1-ml cell culture grade plastic pipette \(this is important). Mix the solution by pipetting up and down 2 to 3 times, which ensures homogenous dispersion of the DNA. Prepare all the cuvettes first, then electroporate one after the other.
Step 2.5: pulse each of the cuvettes and place them on ice immediately after electroporation. Typical time constants range between 6.0 to 6.8 milliseconds, although this may vary depending on the electroporator used. Following electroporation, let the cuvettes rest on ice for 20 minutes.
TIP: during this time, add 10 ml of ES cell medium \(WITHOUT selective drug) to each of the gelatinized 10-cm dishes. In addition, prepare one 15-ml Falcon tube with 10 ml fresh ES cell media for each cuvette.
Step 2.6: transfer the content of a single cuvette into a 15-ml Falcon tube containing 10 ml of ES cell medium with a 1-ml plastic pipette. Rinse each cuvette twice with 1 ml of ES cell medium to recover additional cells. Do not centrifuge these tubes. Plate 2 ml aliquots of each experimental cuvette \(1:5 ratio) into three 10-cm dishes. For the control cuvette \(pDIRE only) plate two dishes \(2 ml each). Place the dishes into the tissue culture incubator.
3. Recovery.
After at least 24 hours, exchange the medium for fresh ES cell medium \(WITHOUT selective drug). This allows the ES cells to recover from the electroporation and allows dRMCE-mediated replacement and expression of the selective drug resistance gene.
TIP: as ES cells attach directly to the gelatin, the medium has to be changed very gently. It should be done the earliest after 24 hrs, i.e. during the afternoon/evening of the day following electroporation.
4. Hygromycin/Puromycin drug selection.
Step 4.1: two days following electroporation, the medium in the experimental dishes \(ES cells electroporated with the pDIRE and the replacement vectors) is exchanged for ES medium supplemented with the appropriate selective drug. In addition, one of the control dishes \(ES cells electroporated with pDIRE only) also receives medium with the selective drug, while the other receives regular ES cell medium.
CRITICAL: The control plate receiving medium WITHOUT selective drug serves as important positive control for ES cell growth and should be clearly labeled as such.
TIP: As puromycin selection requires lower drug concentrations, this is a rather low cost drug selection.
Step 4.2: Change the selection and control medium daily. The first clones will become apparent after 7-8 days of selection.
CRITICAL: during selection make sure to produce enough Mitomycin C treated feeder cells for growing and expanding the ES clones. For isolation of ES cell colonies, two 48 multi-well plates containing treated feeder cells per dRMCE replacement experiment will be needed over a period of four days. Over a 2 days interval, generate at least one 24-well, one 6-well and one 10cm dish per ES cell colony that later needs to be expanded.
Step 4.3: The ES cells growing in the control dish without selective drug will become sub-confluent usually in 2-3 days. Once this happens, wash the plate three times with D-PBS and proceed to extraction of genomic DNA \(see part 8). This DNA sample is critical as it allows testing of the specific PCR amplifications that detect the wild-type, conditional and deleted alleles. A fraction of ES cells will have been electroporated with the pDIRE vector, which will induce cis-recombination of the conditional locus and generation of the deleted allele.
CRITICAL: the PCR primer pairs that were designed to specifically detect the wild-type, conditional and deleted alleles \(see Figure 1) have to be validated prior to starting the isolation of ES cell colonies, as the ones with successful replacement and clonal origin need to be identified rapidly.
Step 4.4: the second control dish that received medium with the selective drug should be devoid of ES cells after about 5 days when using puromycin or 7 days when using hygromycin. This is an important control as it indicates that the drug selection is working.
5. Isolation \(picking) of ES cell colonies.
ES cell colonies are picked using a stereo-microscope \(cleaned carefully with ethanol) placed under the tissue culture hood. In average, ES cell colonies are big enough for picking starting at day 9-10 of drug selection.
Step 5.1: ES cell colonies can be easily spotted by the naked eye through the bottom of the tissue culture dish. Circle the colonies using a marker and carefully screen them under the microscope for ES cell colonies with round, defined borders, but where individual cells are not easily distinguishable \(Figure 2).
CRITICAL: Do not pick ES cell colonies with a flat architecture and/or that are much larger than average colonies. Due to the high number of ES cell colonies present and the relatively low number of colonies that need to be picked, many colonies with perfect morphology \(see Figure 2 for examples) should be readily apparent in the three plates selected per dRMCE construct.
Step 5.2: Add 40μl of cold Trypsin-EDTA \(1x) per well into two rows of a 96 multi-well plate \(24 wells in total; with U-shaped bottom). Keep the plate on ice. Replace the medium in the dish with 8ml of D-PBS \(with Mg2+/Ca2+). An isolated ES cell colony is picked using a Gilson P20 pipette set to 10 μl by aspiration and transferring it into a well of the 96-well plate on ice. After picking 24 ES cell colonies, incubate cells in the Trypsin solution for 7 minutes at 37°C . Replace the D-PBS in the plate that was used to pick the ES cell colonies with fresh medium containing the selective drug and put the plate back in the tissue culture incubator.
Step 5.3: after Trypsin digestion, add 175 μl of ES cell medium without selection to each well using a multi-dispenser pipette. Disperse the cells by pipetting them up and down gently a few times with a Gilson P200 pipette set at 170 μl. Transfer the single cell suspension to one well of a 48 multi-well plate with Mitomycin C-treated feeder cells in 300 μl of ES cell medium WITHOUT selective drug. Return the 48 multi-well plate to the incubator.
CRITICAL: From now on, only use medium WITHOUT selective drug, as feeder cells are not resistant.
Step 5.4: A similar number of ES cell colonies should be picked the two following days by repeating steps 5.1-5.3.
TIP: In some cases, we have observed that fast growing clones, which are first apparent, are negative for dRMCE-mediated replacement. These clones probably arise as a consequence of early, random-integration events resulting in rapid expression of the drug resistance gene. We therefore recommend picking ES cell colonies over a period of 2-3 days \(i.e. about 15-20 clones each day). In our experience, picking 40-60 cell colonies is in general sufficient to yield several correctly replaced ES cell clones. Nevertheless, the plates containing additional ES cell colonies should be kept and the ES cell medium changed every second day until correctly replaced ES cell clones are identified by PCR analysis \(part 8).
6. Expansion of isolated ES cell colonies \(48-well plate).
The day after isolation, inspect the cells under the microscope for viability and density. Exchange the medium by adding 500 μl of fresh ES cell medium.
CRITICAL: To avoid cross-contamination between wells, the tip of the pipette used to aspirate the old culture medium has to be flamed after each aspiration. The new medium should be added to the side of the wells using a multi-dispenser pipette. Great care should be taken to avoid touching the borders of the wells.
7. Passaging the ES cell colonies into a new 48 multi-well plate \(2 days after picking).
Step 7.1: aspirate the ES cell medium and wash the wells with 75 μl of Trypsin-EDTA \(1x). Exchange the 75 μl Trypsin-EDTA \(1x, 75 μl) solution once and incubate the plate at 37°C for 8-10 minutes.
TIP: if some clones have not grown enough, they can be left in the original well for an additional day after changing the medium. To avoid prolonged trypsinization, process only 4-6 wells at a time.
Step 7.2: during the incubation, remove media from a new 48 multi-well plate with Mitomycin C-treated feeder cells and replenish the well with 300 μl of ES cell medium.
Step 7.3: carefully tap the plate containing the ES cell colonies and gently pipette up and down three times using a Gilson P200 pipette set at 60 μl. Immediately add 600 μl of ES cell medium using a multi-dispenser pipette to inactivate the Trypsin. Gently pipette up and down four times using a Gilson P1000 pipette set to 500 μl. Transfer 200 μl of ES cell suspension into a single well of the new 48 multi-well plate and return it to the incubator. Transfer the remaining ES cell suspension to a 1.5ml Eppendorf tube and proceed to DNA extraction \(part 8).
Step 7.4: the following day, monitor the cells under the microscope and change the medium \(further expansion is described in part 9).
8. PCR screening to detect correct dRMCE-mediated replacement events \(in parallel with step 7).
Step 8.1: Process the 1.5-ml tubes containing ES cells for DNA extraction \(step 7.3) in batches of 24 samples. Pellet the cells in a microcentrifuge; wash them once with D-PBS and re-centrifuge.
CRITICAL: it is important to prepare genomic DNA of good quality for reliable PCR identification of correct replacement events. Therefore, the use of the protocol described here is highly recommended. This protocol results in extraction of DNA suitable for PCR analysis that is free of major contaminants. Contaminated or low quality DNA prepared by so-called quick DNA extraction protocols will compromise PCR analysis.
Step 8.2: lyse the cell pellet using 400 μl of lysis buffer \(10 mM Tris-HCl pH8.0; 50mM EDTA; 100mM NaCl; 0.5% SDS) supplemented with 1 mg/ml of Proteinase K \(Merck 24568; stock solution 10 mg/ml in H2O). Incubate for 2 hours at 55°C.
Step 8.3: spin briefly to concentrate the liquid at the bottom of the 1.5-ml tube. Add 350 μl of digestion buffer \(without Proteinase K) and 250 μl of 6M NaCl. Mix by inverting the tube several times \(do NOT vortex).
Step 8.4: centrifuge the tubes for 10 minutes at 13,000 rpm in a microcentrifuge. Transfer the supernatant \(contains the genomic DNA) to a new 1.5-ml tube containing 500 μl of isopropanol. Avoid transferring any of the precipitate \(contains proteins, etc). Mix by gentle inversion for two minutes and re-centrifuge for 10 minutes at 13,000 rpm.
Step 8.5: carefully decant the supernatant – pay special attention to not loose the DNA pellet. Add 1 ml of 70% ethanol and centrifuge for 2 minutes at 13’000 rpm. Remove the supernatant by careful decanting and assure that the DNA pellet is not lost. Re-centrifuge the tubes and remove any residual ethanol using a thin tip.
Step 8.6: air-dry the DNA pellets for 15 minutes and resuspend in 50-100 μl \(depending on pellet size) of 10 mM Tris-Cl, 100 μM EDTA \(pH 8.0). Leave the solution for several hours to overnight at 4°C to resuspend. Mix by brief vortexing and use 1-3 μl of DNA solution per PCR reaction \(in 50 μl total volume).
Step 8.7: Use the previously designed and validated PCR strategy to identify ES cell colonies with correct replacement events. The initial screen should focus on detecting correct recombination at one end of the locus \(i.e. 3’ recombination). To control DNA quality, a PCR amplification detecting the wild-type locus should be included \(all ES cell colonies are heterozygous). ES cell colonies with correct 3’ replacement are then re-screened for 5’ recombination. As a fraction of ES cell colonies might be of mixed nature, it is crucial to verify the absence of the deleted and conditional alleles \(for more details see Osterwalder et al. Ref. 1). In addition, all positive ES cell colonies have to be back-screened for the lack of integrated pDIRE sequences \(Supplementary Figure 4 in Ref. 1). It is possible to complete the entire PCR screening procedure of 48 ES cell colonies in one day.
CRITICAL: Due to the two-step nature of the dRMCE procedure, there is a small fraction of correctly targeted ES cell colonies that are of mixed origin with cells carrying the deleted or conditional allele. These mixed colonies likely originate as a consequence of early unequal segregation of the replacement vector and/or pDIRE plasmid. Using the PCR strategy described here, mixed colonies are easily recognized and must be discarded.
ES cell colonies must be screened during the two days they grow in 48 multi-well plates \(part 7). In the extreme situation that no correctly replaced ES cell colonies would be detected, more could be picked and analyzed \(part 5-7). In case the PCR strategy is flawed and/or fails, candidate colonies for correct replacement could be tentatively identified by the absence of the conditional and deleted alleles in combination with amplification of the wild-type allele as a control. These ES cell colonies could be expanded and frozen in aliquots and the correct replacement proven by rigorous Southern blotting analysis at a later stage.
9. Expansion of correctly replaced ES cell clones.
Step 9.1: mark the correctly replaced clones \(part 8) in the 48 multi-well plates.
Step 9.2: among them, select minimally 6-8 ES cell clones that have good colony morphology \(colonies with defined round borders and with densely packed cells) and are ready to be split 48 hours after plating. Trypsinize these clones \(as described in part 7) and transfer all the cells into one well of a 24 multi-well plate containing Mitomycin C-treated feeders in ES cell medium.
TIP: after removing the selected ES cell clones from the 48 multi-well plate, place the plate on ice. Remove the medium from the additional positive clones \(in groups of 4-8) and gently add 400 μl of ice-cold freezing media. Seal the plate with Parafilm, wrap it in a plastic bag and transfer it to -80°C into a Styrofoam box. Additional positive clones can be recovered from plates stored -80°C in such a manner up to a few months later.
Step 9.3: change the ES cell medium daily and split the cells every 2 days as follows: from a single 24-well to a single 6 well and then into a 10-cm tissue culture dish \(always containing Mitomycin C treated feeder cells). When the cells are ready to be split into a 10-cm dish, take 1/5 of the single cell suspension and plate it into one gelatin-coated well of a 6 multi-well plate. These cells will be used for karyotyping to detect potential chromosomal abnormalities that would interfere with the generation of chimeric mice \(for a detailed karyotyping protocol see Ref. 4). DNA for Southern blot analysis is prepared by replenishing the wells of 24 and 6 multi-well plates with new medium after transferring the trypsinized cells. There is always enough ES cells left behind that can be re-grown and used to prepare larger amounts of clean DNA for Southern Blot analysis. Confirmation of correct replacement by extensive Southern blot analysis is absolutely essential.
TIP: the ES cell clones that a) have a normal karyotype; b) harbor no insertions of the pDIRE vector or random integration of the replacement vector and c) have been validated by Southern blot analysis for correct recombination at both ends can be directly microinjected into mouse blastocysts to generate chimeric mice.
10. Freezing ES cell clones for long-term storage.
Label 5 cryotubes \(Nunc) per 10-cm dish of ES cells to be frozen. Include the locus, code name of the clone, date and the initials of the researcher.
Step 10.1: check the 10-cm dishes of ES cells for optimal confluency \(70%) and colony morphology. Change the media 2-3 hours before the freezing process is initiated.
Step 10.2: trypsinize the ES cells as described \(step 1.5). Centrifuge the cells and resuspend the pellet in 2ml of ice-cold freezing medium in a 15-ml tube. Keep the tube on ice. Add an additional 3 ml of freezing media to the tube and aliquot the 5 ml of cell suspension into the 5 cryotubes \(1 ml each). Transfer the tubes to a Styrofoam holder and wrap it with bubble-wrap. Place this package at -80°C. The next day transfer the cryotubes individually to into a cell freezing box that fits into liquid nitrogen tank for long-term storage. ES cell clones frozen in this manner can be stored for indefinite time.
TIP: One or several of these vials can be sent to the transgenic facility and the ES cells defrosted and expanded for the production of chimeric mice. One vial should be thawed into a 6-cm tissue culture dish containing Mitomycin C-treated feeder cells.