A noninvasive genetic/pharmacologic strategy for visualizing cell morphology and clonal relationships in the mouse

TC Badea, Y Wang, J Nathans - Journal of Neuroscience, 2003 - Soc Neuroscience
Journal of Neuroscience, 2003Soc Neuroscience
Analysis of cellular morphology is the most general approach to neuronal classification. With
the increased use of genetically engineered mice, there is a growing need for methods that
can selectively visualize the morphologies of specified subsets of neurons. This capability is
needed both to define cell morphologic phenotypes and to mark cells in a noninvasive
manner for lineage studies. To this end, we describe a bipartite genetic system based on a
Cre-estrogen receptor (ER) fusion protein that irreversibly activates a plasma membrane …
Analysis of cellular morphology is the most general approach to neuronal classification. With the increased use of genetically engineered mice, there is a growing need for methods that can selectively visualize the morphologies of specified subsets of neurons. This capability is needed both to define cell morphologic phenotypes and to mark cells in a noninvasive manner for lineage studies. To this end, we describe a bipartite genetic system based on a Cre-estrogen receptor (ER) fusion protein that irreversibly activates a plasma membrane-bound alkaline phosphatase reporter gene by site-specific recombination. Because the efficiency and timing of gene rearrangement is controlled pharmacologically, a sparse subset of labeled cells can be generated from the set of CreER-expressing cells at any time during development. Histochemical visualization of alkaline phosphatase activity reveals neuronal morphology with strong and uniform labeling of all processes.
Soc Neuroscience