PUBLICATION
Assaying sensory ciliopathies using calcium biosensor expression in zebrafish ciliated olfactory neurons
- Authors
- Bergboer, J.G.M., Wyatt, C., Austin-Tse, C., Yaksi, E., Drummond, I.A.
- ID
- ZDB-PUB-180324-6
- Date
- 2018
- Source
- Cilia 7: 2 (Journal)
- Registered Authors
- Drummond, Iain, Wyatt, Cameron, Yaksi, Emre
- Keywords
- Calcium imaging, Cilia, GCaMP5, Olfactory sensory neurons, Zebrafish, ift172, oval/ift88
- MeSH Terms
- none
- PubMed
- 29568513 Full text @ Cilia
Citation
Bergboer, J.G.M., Wyatt, C., Austin-Tse, C., Yaksi, E., Drummond, I.A. (2018) Assaying sensory ciliopathies using calcium biosensor expression in zebrafish ciliated olfactory neurons. Cilia. 7:2.
Abstract
Background Primary cilia mediate signal transduction by acting as an organizing scaffold for receptors, signalling proteins and ion channels. Ciliated olfactory sensory neurons (OSNs) organize olfactory receptors and ion channels on cilia and generate a calcium influx as a primary signal in odourant detection. In the zebrafish olfactory placode, ciliated OSNs and microvillus OSNs constitute the major OSN cell types with distinct odourant sensitivity.
Methods Using transgenic expression of the calcium biosensor GCaMP5 in OSNs, we analysed sensory cilia-dependent odour responses in live zebrafish, at individual cell resolution. oval/ift88 mutant and ift172 knockdown zebrafish were compared with wild-type siblings to establish ciliated OSN sensitivity to different classes of odourants.
Results oval/ift88 mutant and ift172 knockdown zebrafish showed fewer and severely shortened OSN cilia without a reduction in OSN number. The fraction of responding OSNs and response amplitudes to bile acids and food odour, both sensed by ciliated OSNs, were significantly reduced in ift88 mutants and ift172-deficient embryos, while the amino acids responses were not significantly changed.
Conclusions Our approach presents a quantitative model for studying sensory cilia signalling using zebrafish OSNs. Our results also implicate ift172-deficiency as a novel cause of hyposmia, a reduced sense of smell, highlighting the value of directly assaying sensory cilia signalling in vivo and supporting the idea that hyposmia can be used as a diagnostic indicator of ciliopathies.
Genes / Markers
Expression
Phenotype
Mutations / Transgenics
Human Disease / Model
Sequence Targeting Reagents
Fish
Orthology
Engineered Foreign Genes
Mapping