Authors: Nikos Kourtis & Nektarios Tavernarakis ### Introduction Currently available methodologies for measuring protein synthesis rates rely on metabolic labelling by incorporation of radioactive amino acids into nascent polypeptides. These approaches are hampered by several limitations and cannot be applied to monitor protein synthesis in specific cells or tissues, in live specimens. Here, we describe a novel method for monitoring protein synthesis in specific cells and tissues of live Caenorhabditis elegans animals. Fluorescent reporter proteins such as GFP are expressed in specific cells and tissues of interest or throughout animals using appropriate promoters. Protein synthesis rates are assessed by following fluorescence recovery after partial photobleaching of the fluorophore at targeted sites. We evaluate the method by examining protein synthesis rates in diverse cell types of the nematode. Because it is non-invasive, our approach allows monitoring of protein synthesis in single cells or tissues with intrinsically different protein synthesis rates. ### Reagents 1. Cycloheximide (Sigma-Aldrich, St. Louis, USA cat. no. C-7698). - NGM plates seeded with *Escherichia coli* strain OP50: 3 g NaCl (Merck, Nottingham, England cat. no. 1.06404.1000), 2.5 g Bactopeptone (BD Biosciences, San Jose, USA, cat.no 211677), 0.2 g Streptomycin (Sigma cat. no. S-6501) and 17 g Agar (Merck cat. no. 1.01614). Autoclave. Let cool to 55-60oC and add 1 ml 5 mg ml-1 cholesterol (SERVA Electrophoresis GmbH, Heidelberg, Germany, cat. no. 1701) in EtOH, 1ml 1 M CaCl2 (Sigma cat. no. C-5080), 1ml 1 M MgSO4 (Sigma cat. no. M-7506), 1ml Nystatin (Sigma cat. no. N-3503) and 25 ml phosphate buffer, pH 6. OP50 is available at the Caenorhabditis Genetics Center (University of Minnesota, Minneapolis, USA; http://biosci.umn.edu/CGC/strains/). - M9 buffer: 22 mM KH2PO4 (Merck cat. no. 1.04873.1000) , 42 mM Na2HPO4 (Merck cat. no. 1.06586.0500) , 85 mM NaCl (Merck cat. no. 1.06404.1000) and 1 mM MgSO4 (Sigma cat. no. M-7506). Dissolve 3 g KH2PO4, 6 g Na2HPO4, 5 g NaCl and 1 ml 1 M MgSO4 in 1 liter distilled water. - Transgenic *C. elegans* strains expressing fluorescent proteins of choice, under the control of appropriate promoters that direct expression in specific cells or tissues of interest. ### Equipment 1. Dissecting stereomicroscope (SMZ645, Nikon Corporation, Kanagawa, Japan) - Epifluorescense microscope (Axioskop 2 Plus, Carl Zeiss AG, Jena, Germany) - Excitation/emission filter sets - Digital camera (Axio Cam HR, Carl Zeiss) - Camera control and imaging software (Axio Vision 3.1 software; Carl Zeiss) - Microscope slides 75×25x1mm (Marienfeld, Lauda-Koenigshofen, Germany cat. no. 10 006 12) - Microscope cover glass 18×18mm (Marienfeld cat. no. 01 010 30) - ImageJ image processing software (Rasband, W.S., ImageJ, U. S. National Institutes of Health, Bethesda, Maryland, USA - http://rsb.info.nih.gov/ij/, 1997-2006, 1997-2006) - Standard equipment for preparing agar plates (autoclave, Petri dishes, etc.) - Standard equipment for maintaining worms (platinum wire pick, incubators, etc.). For basic C. elegans culture, maintenance and manipulation techniques see WormBook – http://www.wormbook.org/). ### Procedure 1. Grow transgenic animals expressing the fluorophore in cells or tissues of interest on 60mm plates seeded with OP50, at the standard temperature of 20oC or other appropriate temperature (depends on genetic background and other experimental considerations such as the temperature sensitivity of animals examined). Unless an environmentally controlled chamber or room is available for the epifluorescence, compound light microscope the procedure of fluorescence photobleaching and recovery is performed at ambient temperature. Allow animals to equilibrate at this temperature for 2-3 hours before photobleaching. - The procedure can be performed either directly on a plate (method A) or on a coverslip (method B). When examining worms that express the fluorescent marker in individual cells, photographs of moving worms are hard to analyze. In this case follow method B, below. For worms expressing the fluorescent marker protein globally or in many tissues, the more convenient method A may be applicable. To limit animal mobility, mild anaesthetics that do not interfere with metabolic processes such as levamisole can be used. Avoid the commonly used sodium azide, which blocks the mitochondrial respiratory chain, perturbs energy production and is likely to interfere with the fluorescence recovery process by hindering protein synthesis. An alternative strategy is to use suitable genetic mutants with limited mobility (uncoordinated, paralyzed). Care should be taken when designing the experiment to avoid genetic backgrounds that are likely to have an effect on protein synthesis. It may also be helpful to use the dominant rol-6(su1006) allele as co-transformation marker (plasmid RF4), when constructing transgenic lines. This allele causes animals to roll instead of moving sinusoidally, which confines them in a relatively small area of the plate. - A) Transfer single worms to fresh 35mm plates, seeded with OP50 bacteria. A small bacterial spot in the center of the plate will make localization of the worm easier, while focusing the sample. - B) Spot a drop of 15ul M9 buffer on a microscope slide and place the worm on the drop with the help of an eyelash glued on a pick. Add a cover slip on the top of the drop. The weight of the cover slip is sufficient to keep the worm immobile during the procedure, without damaging it. After photobleaching, recover the worm by adding 100ul of M9 at the edges of the cover slip and sliding off the cover slip. The worm is returned to an OP50-seeded NGM plate for recovery. - Photograph single animals before photobleaching using a camera attached to the microscope (e.g. Axio Cam HR, Carl Zeiss). Images of fluorescent cells or tissues of interest are collected. Imaging parameters such as microscope and camera settings (lens and magnifier used, filters exposure time, resolution, etc.) should be documented. - Perform photobleaching. Use an epifluorescence, compound light microscope (e.g. Axioskop 2 Plus, Carl Zeiss) equipped with a high power light source (HBO 100; 100 Watt mercury arc lamp; Osram, Munich, Germany) and the appropriate excitation/emission filter sets to photobleach the animal. For the applications described here 10 minutes of photobleaching reduce the initial emission intensity adequately (to within 10-30% of pre-bleach levels). The light intensity and the duration of the bleaching period are adjusted accordingly for the specific fluorophore, animal stage and cell or tissue under examination. Investigators should experimentally determine the appropriate duration of irradiation required to reach the extent of photobleaching, appropriate for different specimens. - Photograph each animal immediately after photobleaching. Collect several images of cells or tissues of interest. Move animals to fresh OP50-seeded NGM plates. Recovery timing starts at this point. - Follow fluorescence recovery by photographing animals at defined time points. We use 1 hr intervals between successive photography sessions. A suitable time interval can be determined for each experimental application. Collect several images of cells or tissues of interest. Similar to step 5 above, it is critical that all imaging parameters (microscope and camera settings) are kept identical to those initially set in step 3. - Prepare a stock solution of cycloheximide by diluting in water to a concentration of 10mg/ml. Keep refrigerated. Add cycloheximide on top of OP50-seeded, 35mm NGM plates to 500ug/ml final concentration in the agar volume and allow plates to dry. - Transfer animals on cycloheximide-containing plates and incubate for 2 hours, at the growth temperature. Prepare animals for photobleaching as in step 2 (A) or (B). Return worms in cycloheximide-containing plates during fluorescence recovery. - Process images acquired in steps 3, 5 and 6 with ImageJ to determine the average and maximum pixel intensity for each image of fluorescent cell or tissue of interest in the collected photomicrographs. For each cell, tissue or animal, images should be acquired or converted to a pixel depth of 8 bit (256 shades of grey). To analyze the area of interest manually, use the “freehand selection” tool to enclose the fluorescent area. Select the “measurement” command via the “analyze” drop-down menu to perform pixel intensity analysis. On occasion (area continuity, high contrast ratios), selection of the fluorescent area can be done automatically. Select “adjust” and then the “threshold” command, within the “image” drop-down menu of ImageJ. Adjust the threshold until the region of interest is marked. Within the “analyze” drop-down menu, select the “analyze particles” command. By selecting “outlines” at the “show” drop-down menu, check whether measurements correspond to the area of interest. - Average and maximum pixel intensity values are collected for each transgenic line and grouped into “Pre-bleach”, “Bleach” and “Recovery(n)”, where n is the time interval after photobleaching. Statistical analysis of data is carried out using the Microsoft Office 2003 Excel software package (Microsoft Corporation, Redmond, USA) and the Prism software package(GraphPad Software Inc., San Diego, USA). The Student’s t test is used for two-way comparisons with a significance cutoff level of p<0.05. Analysis of variance (ANOVA) is used for comparisons of multiple groups of values, followed by Bonferroni-corrected multiple-group comparison t tests. ### Timing 4-5 days ### Critical Steps M9 buffer instead of water ensures a favourable osmotic environment for the worm. Animals should not be allowed to dry out during photobleaching. Supply fresh M9 in the form of 5ul drops applied to the side of the cover slip during lengthy photobleaching sessions. Exercise caution when removing the cover slip to recover the animal. Accidentally pressing on the cover slip will crush the worms. At least 20 individual animals should be processed for each experimental condition. The photobleaching period should be kept identical for all animals tested. Proper photobleaching conditions (light intensity, duration) should be set aiming to avoid injuring worms. The absolute level of fluorescence reduction by photobleaching is not important. We assess damage to worms by looking for apparent changes in behavior such as lethargy and movement defects or diminished responsiveness to touch, and for reduced fecundity in animals subjected to photobleaching. Animals showing signs of damage after photobleaching are excluded from further analysis. All imaging parameters such as microscope and camera settings (lens and magnifier used, filters exposure time, resolution, etc.) should be set as in step 3 above. ### Troubleshooting - Problem: Inadequate photobleaching(Step 4) - Reason: Duration of photobleaching is not sufficient and/or excitation light is not concentrated enough. - Solution: Increase duration of photobleaching. Increase light intensity. Use objective lens with higher magnification and numerical aperture. - Problem: No significant recovery is detected (Step 6) - Reason: Damage to specimen by excessive photobleaching. Recovery kinetics too slow for chosen time intervals. The promoter controlling expression of the fluorochrome is not active during recovery. - Solution: Reduce photobleaching. Allow longer recovery periods. Switch promoter. - Problem: FRAP is not blocked by cycloheximide (Step 8) - Reason: Not sufficient exposure to cycloheximide - Solution: Pre-incubate specimen for longer in the presence of cycloheximide. Increase cycloheximide concentration. ### Anticipated Results We have applied this method to follow protein synthesis in live *C. elegans* animals lacking ife-2, a gene encoding one of the five nematode eIF4E isoforms that functions in somatic tissues. eIF4E is a key mRNA translation initiation factor that binds the 7-methyl guanosine cap at the 5’ end of all nuclear mRNAs and determines the rate of cap-dependent protein synthesis. After photobleaching, fluorescence recovery is monitored in transgenic, wild type and ife-2 knockout animals, expressing GFP throughout somatic tissues. Recovery is diminished in IFE-2-deficient animals or animals treated with cycloheximide. 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Some nematode strains used in this work were provided by the C. elegans Gene Knockout Project at OMRF - http://www.mutantfactory.ouhsc.edu/, which is part of the International *C. elegans* Gene Knockout Consortium and the *Caenorhabditis* Genetics Center, which is funded by the NIH National Center for Research Resources (NCRR). We thank Dr. Andrew Fire for plasmid vectors. This work was funded by grants from EMBO and the EU 6th Framework Programme to N.T. ### Associated Publications **eIF4E function in somatic cells modulates ageing in Caenorhabditis elegans**, Popi Syntichaki, Kostoula Troulinaki, and Nektarios Tavernarakis, *Nature* 445 (7130) 922 - 926 22/02/2007 [doi:10.1038/nature05603](http://dx.doi.org/10.1038/nature05603) ### Author information **Nikos Kourtis & Nektarios Tavernarakis**, Institute of Molecular Biology and Biotechnology Correspondence to: Nektarios Tavernarakis (tavernarakis@imbb.forth.gr) *Source: [Protocol Exchange](http://www.nature.com/protocolexchange/protocols/434) (2008) doi:10.1038/nprot.2008.84. Originally published online 27 March 2008*.