4.7 Article

Single-cell imaging of normal and malignant cell engraftment into optically clear prkdc-null SCID zebrafish

Journal

JOURNAL OF EXPERIMENTAL MEDICINE
Volume 213, Issue 12, Pages 2575-2589

Publisher

ROCKEFELLER UNIV PRESS
DOI: 10.1084/jem.20160378

Keywords

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Funding

  1. Alex's Lemonade Stand Foundation
  2. Live Like Bella Foundation for Childhood Cancer
  3. American Cancer Society
  4. Massachusetts General Hospital (MGH) Howard Goodman Fellowship
  5. National Institutes of Health [R24OD016761, R01CA154923, U54CA168512]
  6. China Scholarship Council
  7. NIH [1S10OD012027-01A1, 1S10OD016372-01, S10RR020936-01, 1S10RR023440-01A1]
  8. University of Utah Health and Sciences Genetic Mutation and Detection Core

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Cell transplantation into immunodeficient mice has revolutionized our understanding of regeneration, stem cell self-renewal, and cancer; yet models for direct imaging of engrafted cells has been limited. Here, we characterize zebrafish with mutations in recombination activating gene 2 (rag2), DNA-dependent protein kinase (prkdc), and janus kinase 3 (jak3). Histology, RNA sequencing, and single-cell transcriptional profiling of blood showed that rag2 hypomorphic mutant zebrafish lack T cells, whereas prkdc deficiency results in loss of mature T and B cells and jak3 in T and putative Natural Killer cells. Although all mutant lines engraft fluorescently labeled normal and malignant cells, only the prkdc mutant fish reproduced as homozygotes and also survived injury after cell transplantation. Engraftment into optically clear casper, prkdc-mutant zebrafish facilitated dynamic live cell imaging of muscle regeneration, repopulation of muscle stem cells within their endogenous niche, and muscle fiber fusion at single-cell resolution. Serial imaging approaches also uncovered stochasticity in fluorescently labeled leukemia regrowth after competitive cell transplantation into prkdc mutant fish, providing refined models to assess clonal dominance and progression in the zebrafish. Our experiments provide an optimized and facile transplantation model, the casper, prkdc mutant zebrafish, for efficient engraftment and direct visualization of fluorescently labeled normal and malignant cells at single-cell resolution.

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