4.4 Article

Slide Preparation Method to Preserve Three-dimensional Chromatin Architecture of Testicular Germ Cells

Journal

JOVE-JOURNAL OF VISUALIZED EXPERIMENTS
Volume -, Issue 83, Pages -

Publisher

JOURNAL OF VISUALIZED EXPERIMENTS
DOI: 10.3791/50819

Keywords

Basic Protocol; Issue 83; Chromatin; Germ cells; Sex chromosomes; Testis; Meiotic sex chromosome inactivation; Postmeiotic sex chromatin

Funding

  1. Basil O'Connor Starter Scholar Award from the March of Dimes Foundation
  2. NIH Grant [GM098605]

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During testicular germ cell differentiation, the structure of nuclear chromatin dynamically changes. The following describes a method designed to preserve the three-dimensional chromatin arrangement of testicular germ cells found in mice; this method has been termed as the three-dimensional (3D) slide method. In this method, testicular tubules are directly treated with a permeabilization step that removes cytoplasmic material, followed by a fixation step that fixes nuclear materials. Tubules are then dissociated, the cell suspension is cytospun, and cells adhere to slides. This method improves sensitivity towards detection of subnuclear structures and is applicable for immunofluorescence, DNA, and RNA fluorescence in situ hybridization (FISH) and the combination of these detection methods. As an example of a possible application of the 3D slide method, a Cot-1 RNA FISH is shown to detect nascent RNAs. The 3D slide method will facilitate the detailed examination of spatial relationships between chromatin structure, DNA, and RNA during testicular germ cell differentiation.

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