Oligonucleotide-based tools for studying zebrafish development.

Return to Grants

Publication Year:
2010
Authors:
PubMed ID:
20392138
Public Summary:
Insights obtained by studying embryonic development are both intellectually satisfying and informative to the clinical efforts in stem cell-based tissue regeneration via stem cells. Since the time of Aristotle, scientists have strived to explain this fascinating phenomenon using a ‘perturb and observe’ paradigm to study model organisms. These pioneering developmental biologists meticulously analyzed embryos from sea urchins, chickens, frogs, and other animals by injecting them with dyes to follow cell lineages and conducting surgical procedures to study interactions between tissues. Their investigations revealed conserved embryological processes among evolutionary diverse organisms and introduced concepts such as tissue-organizing centers and morphogen gradients. Over the past three decades, the zebrafish model system has emerged as one of the mainstream models of development with unique advantages over mammalian systems. Zebrafish share many common developmental mechanisms with other vertebrates, such as mammals. However, unlike mice, they develop rapidly, externally, and in large clutch sizes. These properties facilitate microinjection, imaging, and enable large scale screens for chemicals that affect development. The ease of microinjecting zebrafish eggs has allowed the use of synthetic and nonnatural oligonucleotide molecules to interrogate functions of genes involved in zebrafish development. In this review, we survey the capabilities and limitations of various oligonucleotide-based technologies for perturbing RNA function and tracking RNA expression. We also examine recent strategies for achieving control of oligonucleotide function within different tissues of the embryo and at different time points in development. In particular, we describe the use of light-gated technologies that exploit the optical transparency of zebrafish embryos.
Scientific Abstract:
Synthetic and nonnatural oligonucleotides have been used extensively to interrogate gene function in zebrafish. In this review, we survey the capabilities and limitations of various oligonucleotide-based technologies for perturbing RNA function and tracking RNA expression. We also examine recent strategies for achieving spatiotemporal control of oligonucleotide function, particularly light-gated technologies that exploit the optical transparency of zebrafish embryos.