The Xenopus Oocyte: A Single-Cell Model for Studying Ca2+ Signaling
Abstract
In the four decades since the Xenopus oocyte was first demonstrated to have the capacity to translate exogenous mRNAs, this system has been exploited for many different experimental purposes. Typically, the oocyte is used either as a “biological test tube” for heterologous expression of proteins without any particular cell biological insight or, alternatively, it is used for applications where cell biology is paramount, such as investigations of the cellular adaptations that power early development. In this article, we discuss the utility of the Xenopus oocyte for studying Ca2+ signaling in both these contexts.
BACKGROUND
The oocyte is the cellular precursor for the development of specialized cells. Oocytes from the South African clawed frog Xenopus laevis provide the most commonly used oocyte model for studying the properties, organization, and cellular roles of Ca2+-permeable channels and transporters. For experimentalists, the Xenopus oocyte brings together in a single cell the capacity to investigate protein function and cell biological processes on a colossal scale and across a range spanning from single molecules to entire genomes (Miledi et al. 1983; Sonnleitner et al. 2002; Demuro and Parker 2006; Halley-Stott et al. 2010). Key mechanistic principles of Ca2+ signaling have been demonstrated in this model—for example, identification of receptors and channels that mediate Ca2+ signals and characterization of how these proteins work (Lubbert et al. 1987; Mak and Foskett 1994; Beene et al. 2003; Goldin 2006), observation of unique spatiotemporal profiles of agonist-triggered Ca2+ signals (Lechleiter et al. 1991a,b), mechanistic dissection of Ca2+ oscillations (Camacho and Lechleiter 1993; Girard and Clapham 1993), demonstration of the functional coupling of endoplasmic reticulum (ER) and mitochondrial Ca2+ stores (Jouaville et al. 1995), and resolution of how cellular Ca2+ signals arise through orchestration of localized Ca2+-release events (Parker and Yao 1991; Parker et al. 1996). Emerging Xenopus resources for the two species commonly used in the laboratory (X. laevis and X. tropicalis, the latter being a smaller and more quickly developing diploid frog) span genomic and bioinformatic data (Bowes et al. 2010), and reagent repositories (Pearl et al. 2012), as well as methods for high-throughput functional genetic assays and transgenesis (Harland and Grainger 2011). These toolsets underscore the broad utility of Xenopus as an easily maintained and readily manipulated tetrapod model relevant to human development and disease.
In the broadest view, two applications bring experimentalists to the Xenopus oocyte. The first application is as an incubator for gene expression divorced from cell biology—a biological test tube (Gurdon et al. 1971; Barnard et al. 1982). Classically, this encompasses gain-of-function analyses to resolve the properties of heterologously expressed gene products (e.g., by recording the electrophysiological signatures of cell-surface proteins [Stuhmer and Parekh 1995; Goldin 2006] or by identifying genes themselves using expression cloning [Lubbert et al. 1987; Markovich 2008]). The second application is to study the cell biology of the Xenopus oocyte in its own right. The oocyte is a remarkable cell that is uniquely tailored to complete maturation, fertilization, and early embryogenesis following a massive accumulation of resources during oogenesis. The trajectory of a cell that remodels from growth without division (pre-fertilization) to division without growth (early embryogenesis) affords remarkable opportunities to study the cellular specializations that enable such behavior. Consequently, the impact of studies using Xenopus oocytes/eggs and their extracts on many aspects of cell biology has been extensive (Brown 2004). Of course, these dual applications of the Xenopus system are interdependent—both derive from the endogenous synthetic capacity of the oocyte (hijacked by injection of foreign genes) and the fact that the resultant expression is supported on such a gigantic scale.
ADVANTAGES OF THE XENOPUS OOCYTE AS A LIVING TEST TUBE
There are several reasons why the Xenopus oocyte is a facile system for heterologous expression.
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Oocytes are easy to obtain. Frog colonies are inexpensive to maintain and husbandry is straightforward. Surgical extraction protocols are simple and oocytes are abundant (a mature female frog has >20,000 oocytes). Alternatively, oocytes and ovaries can be directly sourced from commercial vendors (e.g., EcoCyte Bioscience and Nasco) or resource centers (Pearl et al. 2012).
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Fully grown Xenopus oocytes are robust. Following the completion of oogenesis, stage VI oocytes are completely synchronized by arrest at the end of the G2 phase of meiosis I and can remain in that state in vivo (possibly for years) until hormonal maturation results in the completion of meiosis and ovulation. As a colossal, autonomous “organ system” (Soreq and Seidman 1992), the oocyte is capable of being maintained in vitro for extended periods of time (typically <2 wk post-injection [Stuhmer and Parekh 1995]).
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The large size of oocytes used for expression studies (∼1.0–1.3 mm in diameter, stage V and VI [Dumont 1972]) allows for manual microinjection methods. Constructs can be introduced by injection of cDNA into the germinal vesicle (a target ∼0.4 mm in diameter) or by cytoplasmic injection of RNA (or rarely cDNA [Geib et al. 2001]). Multiple species can be injected simultaneously, which is important for (i) Ca2+ channel proteins that function as complexes where the relative levels of mRNA for different subunits can be titrated to optimize functional expression, and (ii) co-injection of mRNA with modified tRNAs for unnatural amino acid labeling (Beene et al. 2003). Proteins, vesicles, and whole organelles have also been reconstituted for functional assays (Le Caherec et al. 1996; Sheu and Sharma 1999; Palma et al. 2003; Au et al. 2010; Halley-Stott et al. 2010). All these microinjection protocols can be accomplished without elaborate equipment.
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The oocyte is a promiscuous yet faithful expression system. Ca2+ channels/transporters from a broad swathe of eukaryotic organisms (Table 1) as well as animal virus proteins (e.g., viroporins [Antoine et al. 2007]) can be functionally expressed. Prokaryotic channels have also been expressed, although examples are less numerous (Bocquet et al. 2007; Choi et al. 2010; Maksaev and Haswell 2011), possibly reflecting divergent environmental requirements for channel function relative to their native systems. The use of the oocyte as an ex situ system for protein analysis is especially important for organisms where in situ recordings would be challenging.
View this table:Table 1.Broad species specificity for functional protein expression in Xenopus oocytes
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Functional assays are easy to perform. Again, the large size and spare translational capacity (Moar et al. 1971) of the oocyte facilitate observation and integration of responses. The oocyte provides a huge canvas for imaging—with a total plasma membrane area of ∼20 mm2, membrane domains ∼100-fold larger than those attainable in mammalian cells can be imaged (Ottolia et al. 2007). The same holds for intracellular imaging, where large regions of the ER can be monitored for Ca2+ release activity. With regard to integration of electrophysiological responses, detectable currents as small as tens of nA can be recorded by two-electrode voltage clamp (i.e., a single ion channel opening [1 pA; Popen = 0.1] in every 40 μm2 of membrane). Copy numbers of expressed proteins are large (∼5 × 108 [Sigel 1990]), correlating with synthetic rates of ∼100–200 molecules of protein per injected mRNA molecule per day (Gurdon et al. 1971; Halley-Stott et al. 2010). With sensitive endogenous Ca2+-activated chloride currents (Miledi and Parker 1984; Schroeder et al. 2008), store-operated Ca2+ entry (Yu et al. 2009), and exogenous reporters for Ca2+ signals, the impact of heterologously expressed proteins on Ca2+ signals can easily be assessed. Such advantages have been leveraged to the extremes as shown by protocols for high-throughput drug screening or ensemble imaging of single channel Ca2+ fluxes (Demuro and Parker 2006; Goldin 2006; Papke and Stokes 2010).
XENOPUS OOCYTES AS A REAL CELL: FUNCTIONAL ARCHITECTURE OF Ca2+ SIGNALS
Amphibians possess an oogonial stem cell population that generates new oocytes every year. The process of oocyte growth is long (∼2 yr) and discontinuous, during which the microscopic oocyte increases many times in size (>10,000-fold) to become a full-grown stage VI oocyte. It is important to understand that during oogenesis, the cell is actively accumulating (lipid) and synthesizing (proteins, mRNAs) reserves of material to autonomously support early embryonic development. The large size of the oocyte results from receptor-mediated endocytosis of yolk protein precursors synthesized in the liver to provide nutrient stores for embryogenesis. The huge nucleus of the growing oocyte engages in protracted and intense RNA synthesis. This is illustrated by the existence of “lampbrush” chromosomes imparting transcriptional activity at rates 1000-fold greater than observed in Xenopus embryonic cells (∼1.1 ng RNA/h [Anderson and Smith 1978; Anderson et al. 1982]). Collectively, this absorptive and synthetic activity results in a prolonged warehousing of resources to power early embryogenesis. Table 2 conveys the massive scale and enrichment of resources within a Xenopus oocyte compared to a generic mammalian cell—the oocyte nucleus alone is ∼40,000 times the volume of a tissue culture cell!
Comparison of single cell resources of a Xenopus oocyte versus a mammalian cell
The large dimensions and protein content of a full-grown oocyte facilitate a scale and scope of experimental assays that would prove exacting to execute in other cells (including oocytes from other species). A clear utility is for studying organelle properties and dynamics. The oocyte presents huge spatiotemporal canvases for imaging the native organization and function of Ca2+ channels and the properties of heterologously expressed constructs. The size of the oocyte nucleus facilitates studies of transport via single nuclear pore complexes (Peters 2006) and single-channel electrophysiology of intracellular Ca2+ channels (Mak and Foskett 1994). Although biochemical techniques are generally less sensitive, the abundance of resources allows for single-cell application of techniques usually applied at a population level. Examples include magnetic resonance spectroscopy and single-cell mass spectrometry for chemical imaging (Lee et al. 2006; Fletcher et al. 2007). A clear caveat is that these experimental opportunities occur in the context of a highly specialized cell—although the oocyte contains plentiful reserves of protein and RNA (the majority is yolk [∼80% of protein] and rRNA [95% of RNA]), content is not enriched proportionally to somatic cells (Brown and Dawid 1968; Chase and Dawid 1972) and organelle morphology, protein distribution, and trafficking events are uniquely tailored to oocyte cell biology (Brown and Dawid 1968; Wall and Meleka 1985; Cordes et al. 1995; Zampighi et al. 1999). Finally, the large size of the oocyte presents challenges, restricting kinetic analysis of currents recorded by conventional two-electrode voltage clamp and optical turbidity restricts imaging depth (Stuhmer and Parekh 1995; Marchant and Parker 2001b; Goldin 2006).
Nevertheless, the Xenopus oocyte has proved invaluable for scientists interested in Ca2+ signaling. Key advantages include:
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the predominant expression of a single intracellular Ca2+ channel (type 1 inositol 1,4,5-trisphosphate (InsP3) receptor [Parys et al. 1992; Zhang et al. 2007])
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the existence of endogenous phosphoinositide-coupled receptors that release Ca2+ and endogenous electrophysiological readouts for Ca2+ release activity (Miledi and Parker 1984; Schroeder et al. 2008; Yu et al. 2009)
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the presence of multiple organelle types in the oocyte periphery, including the cortical ER band from which a variety of spatial and temporal patterns of Ca2+ release can be triggered and imaged
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the capacity to image InsP3 receptor function and organization at high resolution (single channels in situ) and over protracted periods of time, for example, during the dramatic reorganizations of ER morphology that occur during oocyte maturation; such studies have shown that InsP3 receptor sensitivity is regulated with high spatial acuity in both the oocyte and egg, even between contiguous ER regions (Marchant and Parker 2001a; Boulware and Marchant 2005, 2008)
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the utility of the oocyte as a polarized cell, relevant for studying the overall distribution of Ca2+ signaling components needed for developmental axis formation (Kume et al. 1997; Saneyoshi et al. 2002)
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finally, as discussed above, the ability to heterologously express proteins that impact Ca2+ homeostasis
Methods for utilizing Xenopus oocytes to study Ca2+ signaling are described in Nuclear Microinjection to Assess How Heterologously Expressed Proteins Impact Ca2+ Signals in Xenopus Oocytes (Lin-Moshier and Marchant 2013a) and A Rapid Western Blotting Protocol for the Xenopus Oocyte (Lin-Moshier and Marchant 2013b). Both protocols are also applicable for probing the functional architecture of Ca2+ channels over a longer time frame, for example, during oocyte maturation into a fertilizable egg.
ACKNOWLEDGMENT
This work supported by the National Institutes of Health (GM088790).
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