Published March 1, 2022 | Version Supplemental Material
Journal Article Open

Reverse Genetic Approach to Identify Regulators of Pigmentation using Zebrafish

  • 1. ROR icon Academy of Scientific and Innovative Research
  • 2. ROR icon California Institute of Technology

Abstract

Melanocytes are specialized neural crest-derived cells present in the epidermal skin. These cells synthesize melanin pigment that protects the genome from harmful ultraviolet radiations. Perturbations in melanocyte functioning lead to pigmentary disorders such as piebaldism, albinism, vitiligo, melasma, and melanoma. Zebrafish is an excellent model system to understand melanocyte functions. The presence of conspicuous pigmented melanocytes, ease of genetic manipulation, and availability of transgenic fluorescent lines facilitate the study of pigmentation. This study employs the use of wild-type and transgenic zebrafish lines that drive green fluorescent protein (GFP) expression under mitfa and tyrp1 promoters that mark various stages of melanocytes. Morpholino-based silencing of candidate genes is achieved to evaluate the phenotypic outcome on larval pigmentation and is applicable to screen for regulators of pigmentation. This protocol demonstrates the method from microinjection to imaging and fluorescence-activated cell sorting (FACS)-based dissection of phenotypes using two candidate genes, carbonic anhydrase 14 (Ca14) and a histone variant (H2afv), to comprehensively assess the pigmentation outcome. Further, this protocol demonstrates segregating candidate genes into melanocyte specifiers and differentiators that selectively alter melanocyte numbers and melanin content per cell, respectively.

Additional Information

© 2022 JoVE Journal of Visualized Experiments. Date Published: March 1, 2022. We acknowledge the funding support from the Council for Scientific and Industrial Research vide project MLP2008 and the Department of Science and Technology for the project GAP165 for supporting the work presented in this manuscript. We thank Jeyashri Rengaraju and Chetan Mishra for their help with experiments. All authors declare no conflict of interest.

Attached Files

Supplemental Material - jove-materials-62955-reverse-genetic-approach-to-identify-regulators-pigmentation-using.pdf

Files

jove-materials-62955-reverse-genetic-approach-to-identify-regulators-pigmentation-using.pdf

Additional details

Identifiers

Eprint ID
114120
DOI
10.3791/62955
Resolver ID
CaltechAUTHORS:20220329-597130944

Related works

Describes
10.3791/62955 (DOI)

Funding

Council for Scientific and Industrial Research (CSIR)
MLP2008
Department of Science and Technology (South Africa)
GAP165

Dates

Created
2022-03-29
Created from EPrint's datestamp field
Updated
2022-04-04
Created from EPrint's last_modified field