4.5 Article

Application of Recombinant Rabies Virus to Xenopus Tadpole Brain

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ENEURO
卷 8, 期 4, 页码 -

出版社

SOC NEUROSCIENCE
DOI: 10.1523/ENEURO.0477-20.2021

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recombinant rabies virus; retrograde labeling; Xenopus; optic tectum; mesoscale connectomics

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The Xenopus laevis experimental system has provided important insights into the development and plasticity of neural circuits, and additional tools are needed to study the structure and function of neural circuits. Rabies virus has been widely used to study mesoscale connectomics but its use in transducing neurons and expressing transgenes in Xenopus has not been systematically investigated.
The Xenopus laevis experimental system has provided significant insight into the development and plasticity of neural circuits. Xenopus neuroscience research would be enhanced by additional tools to study neural circuit structure and function. Rabies viruses are powerful tools to label and manipulate neural circuits and have been widely used to study mesoscale connectomics. Whether rabies virus can be used to transduce neurons and express transgenes in Xenopus has not been systematically investigated. Glycoprotein-deleted rabies virus transduces neurons at the axon terminal and retrogradely labels their cell bodies. We show that glyco-protein-deleted rabies virus infects local and projection neurons in the Xenopus tadpole when directly injected into brain tissue. Pseudotyping glycoprotein-deleted rabies with EnvA restricts infection to cells with exogenous expression of the EnvA receptor, TVA. EnvA pseudotyped virus specifically infects tadpole neurons with promoter-driven expression of TVA, demonstrating its utility to label targeted neuronal populations. Neuronal cell types are defined by a combination of features including anatomic location, expression of genetic markers, axon projection sites, morphology, and physiological properties. We show that driving TVA expression in one hemisphere and injecting EnvA pseudotyped virus into the contralateral hemisphere, retrogradely labels neurons defined by cell body location and axon projection site. Using this approach, rabies can be used to identify cell types in Xenopus brain and simultaneously to express transgenes which enable monitoring or manipulation of neuronal activity. This makes rabies a valuable tool to study the structure and function of neural circuits in Xenopus.

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