Jul 25, 2022

Public workspaceA versatile nuclei extraction protocol for single nucleus sequencing in fish species – optimization in various Atlantic salmon tissues. V.1

  • Rose Ruiz Daniels1,
  • Richard S Taylor1,
  • Ross Dobie2,
  • Sarah Salisbury1,
  • Emily Clark1,
  • Dan Macqueen1,
  • Diego Robledo1
  • 1The Roslin Institute and Royal (Dick) School of Veterinary Studies, The University of Edinburgh, Edinburgh EH25 9RG, UK;
  • 2Centre for Inflammation Research, The Queen’s Medical Research Institute, Edinburgh BioQuarter, University of Edinburgh, EH16 4TJ, UK
  • The Roslin Institute
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Protocol CitationRose Ruiz Daniels, Richard S Taylor, Ross Dobie, Sarah Salisbury, Emily Clark, Dan Macqueen, Diego Robledo 2022. A versatile nuclei extraction protocol for single nucleus sequencing in fish species – optimization in various Atlantic salmon tissues.. protocols.io https://dx.doi.org/10.17504/protocols.io.261genwm7g47/v1
License: This is an open access protocol distributed under the terms of the Creative Commons Attribution License,  which permits unrestricted use, distribution, and reproduction in any medium, provided the original author and source are credited
Protocol status: Working
We use this protocol and it’s working
Created: April 27, 2022
Last Modified: July 25, 2022
Protocol Integer ID: 61554
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Abstract
Single cell RNA sequencing has rapidly become a standard tool for profiling transcriptomic diversity across thousands of cells (Linnarsson and Teichmann, 2016), and is now being applied to a large diversity of species and tissues. The main limitation of this technology is that it requires the isolation of live cells from fresh tissue, severely restricting its applicability. As a result, single nuclei RNA sequencing (snRNA-seq), which consists of sequencing the RNA of only the nuclei of cells rather than of the whole cell, has been commonly adopted since it allows samples to be stored for several months prior to processing while yielding comparable results to whole cell sequencing (Kulkarni, et al., 2019; Slyper et al. 2021). A critical challenge for snRNA-seq is the successful extraction of high quality nuclei. This has spurred the recent publication of a number of dissociation protocols for nuclei extraction (Drokhlyansky et al. 2020; Eraslan et al. 2021; Melms et al 2021), however, these have largely been optimized for model species such as humans, and more and more single nuclei is being adopted in non-model species.

Here we present a robust protocol that enables the extraction of nuclei from frozen tissue adapted from those shown to work in different tissue types, such as human skin (Drokhlyansky et al. 2020; Eraslan et al. 2021; Melms et al 2021). Our protocol has been used to successfully extract nuclei from an array of different Atlantic salmon (Salmo salar) tissues including skin, fin, spleen, head kidney, liver and gill as well as in other species such as sole (Solea solea) and rabbit (Oryctolagus cuniculus) nasal tissue and nurse shark (Ginglymostoma cirratumspleen). We present the protocol as applied to fin and skin as these are particularly challenging tissues to work with given their toughness and the presence of hard tissue (e.g., scales and bones), connective tissue and fat deposits. We include notes throughout the protocol so that the reader can optimise it for a variety of tissue types. While the protocol has been optimised to work with the Chromium 10x platform, the most commonly used high throughput microfluidic device, but can be used successfully for the extraction of nuclei for other platforms and applications. The aim of this protocol is to capture 7,000 nuclei per single-nuclei RNA sequencing library using the Chromium Single Cell 3’ Reagent Kits v2 or v3 (10X Genomics). Given its utility for isolating nuclei from difficult to dissociate tissue types, we anticipate that this protocol will be broadly applicable for snRNA-seq of non-model organisms and unconventional tissue types.
Attachments
Guidelines
References:


CITATION
Drokhlyansky E, Smillie CS, Van Wittenberghe N, Ericsson M, Griffin GK, Eraslan G, Dionne D, Cuoco MS, Goder-Reiser MN, Sharova T, Kuksenko O, Aguirre AJ, Boland GM, Graham D, Rozenblatt-Rosen O, Xavier RJ, Regev A (2020). The Human and Mouse Enteric Nervous System at Single-Cell Resolution.. Cell.
  • Eraslan, G.; Drokhlyansky, E.; Anand, S.; Subramanian, A.; Fiskin, E.; Slyper, M.; Wang, J.; Wittenberghe, N. Van; Rouhana, J.M.; Waldman, J.; et al. Single-nucleus cross-tissue molecular reference maps to decipher disease gene function. bioRxiv 2021, 2021.07.19.452954.
  • Kulkarni, A.; Anderson, A.G.; Merullo, D.P.; Konopka, G. Beyond bulk: a review of single cell transcriptomics methodologies and applications. Curr. Opin. Biotechnol. 2019, 58, 129–136.
CITATION
Linnarsson S, Teichmann SA (2016). Single-cell genomics: coming of age.. Genome biology.

CITATION
Slyper M, Porter CBM, Ashenberg O, Waldman J, Drokhlyansky E, Wakiro I, Smillie C, Smith-Rosario G, Wu J, Dionne D, Vigneau S, Jané-Valbuena J, Tickle TL, Napolitano S, Su MJ, Patel AG, Karlstrom A, Gritsch S, Nomura M, Waghray A, Gohil SH, Tsankov AM, Jerby-Arnon L, Cohen O, Klughammer J, Rosen Y, Gould J, Nguyen L, Hofree M, Tramontozzi PJ, Li B, Wu CJ, Izar B, Haq R, Hodi FS, Yoon CH, Hata AN, Baker SJ, Suvà ML, Bueno R, Stover EH, Clay MR, Dyer MA, Collins NB, Matulonis UA, Wagle N, Johnson BE, Rotem A, Rozenblatt-Rosen O, Regev A (2020). A single-cell and single-nucleus RNA-Seq toolbox for fresh and frozen human tumors.. Nature medicine.

Materials
MATERIAL

ReagentNoyes Spring Scissors - Tungsten CarbideFine Science ToolsCatalog #15514-12
ReagentTungsten Carbide Straight 11.5 cm Fine Scissors Fine Science ToolsCatalog #14558-11
Thikness40 µm ReagentFalcon™ Cell StrainersFisher ScientificCatalog #08-771-2
ReagentCorning™ Falcon™ Test Tube with 35µm Cell Strainer Snap CapCorningCatalog #352235
ReagentpluriStrainer Mini 20 µm (Cell Strainer)pluriSelectCatalog #43-10020-50
X500 Eppendorf DNA LoBind Tubes, 1.5ml, PCR clean
Cryotube
6-well tissue culture plate (Stem Cell Technologies)
Falcon tubes 15 ml (Corning)
ReagentINCYTO C-Chip™ Disposable HemacytometersVwrCatalog #82030-468


SAMPLING AND STORAGE FOR NUCLEAR ISOLATION

Animals must be appropriately euthanized and immediately processed. Approximately ~Amount60 mg of salmonid tissue is placed in one clearly labelled cryotube and immediately flash frozen in liquid nitrogen. This step is critical. The tissue must be preserved as fast as possible for optimal results. In the absence of liquid nitrogen, samples can be frozen in dry ice. Samples can be stored at Temperature-80 °C for up to a year prior to use. Older samples might still yield viable nuclei but this would need to be tested.


REAGENTS

All reagents should be chilled on ice prior to use.

2X stock of salt-Tris solution makes Amount10 mL :

Stocks:

NaCl: ReagentNaCl (5 M) RNase-freeThermo Fisher ScientificCatalog #AM9759
Tris-HCl pH 7.5: ReagentUltraPure™ 1 M Tris-HCI Buffer, pH 7.5Thermo FisherCatalog #15567027
CaCl2: ReagentCalcium chloride 1 M in aqueous solutionVwrCatalog #97062-820
MgCl2: ReagentMagnesium chloride solution for molecular biology (1.00 M)Sigma – AldrichCatalog #M1028
Nuclease-free water: Reagent Water for biotechnology nuclease-free sterileVwrCatalog #97062-794

ABC
Stock solution (see above)VolumeFinal concentration
NaCl292 ul146 mM
Tris-HCL10100 ul10 mM
CaCl210 ul1 mM
MgCl2 210 ul21 mM
Nuclease-free water9388 ml

The following buffers contain RNAase inhibitor ReagentProtector RNase InhibitorSigma AldrichCatalog #3335399001
  • It is important to use the correct RNAse inhibitor as it can negatively affect library prep, check with the sequencing platform before using another type of RNAse.
  • Do not add RNAse until right before nuclear extraction.
  • RNAse inhibitor does not need to be used to test nuclear extractions, but it should added for sequencing runs.

1X ST buffer solution (ST) - Amount10 mL :

Dilute 2x ST in ultrapure nuclease-free water (1:1)

ABC
Stock SolutionVolume Final concentration
2X ST5 ml
Ultrapure nuclease free water 5 ml
RNAse inhibitor5.2 µl (160 U)40 Uml

Working solution (TST) – Amount4 mL :

1% Tween-20: ReagentTween-20Sigma-aldrichCatalog #P-7949
2% BSA: ReagentBovine Serum Albumin (20 mg/mL) Molecular Biology GradeNew England BiolabsCatalog #B9000S


ABC
Stock solutionVolumeFinal concentration
2X ST buffer1 ml
1% Tween-2060 µl
2% BSA 10 µl
Nuclease-free water 930 µl
RNAse inhibitor2.08 µl (160 U)40 Uml


PBS+0.02 BSA (PBS+BSA) – Amount1 mL :
ABC
Stock solutionVolumeFinal concentration
Ultra-pure molecular grade PBS990 µl
2% BSA **10 µl
RNAse inhibitor0.6 µl40U ml
** can top this up this to 2% BSA if the cells are clumping or look degraded


Protocol materials
ReagentProtector RNase InhibitorMerck MilliporeSigma (Sigma-Aldrich)Catalog #3335399001
ReagentINCYTO C-Chip™ Disposable HemacytometersVWR International (Avantor)Catalog #82030-468
ReagentCalcium chloride 1 M in aqueous solutionVWR International (Avantor)Catalog #97062-820
ReagentFalcon™ Cell StrainersFisher ScientificCatalog #08-771-2
ReagentpluriStrainer Mini 20 µm (Cell Strainer)pluriSelectCatalog #43-10020-50
Reagent Water for biotechnology nuclease-free sterileVWR International (Avantor)Catalog #97062-794
ReagentBovine Serum Albumin (20 mg/mL) Molecular Biology GradeNew England BiolabsCatalog #B9000S
ReagentNoyes Spring Scissors - Tungsten CarbideFine Science ToolsCatalog #15514-12
ReagentUltraPure™ 1 M Tris-HCI Buffer, pH 7.5Thermo FisherCatalog #15567027
ReagentMagnesium chloride solution for molecular biology (1.00 M)Merck MilliporeSigma (Sigma-Aldrich)Catalog #M1028
ReagentTween-20Merck MilliporeSigma (Sigma-Aldrich)Catalog #P-7949
ReagentCorning™ Falcon™ Test Tube with 35µm Cell Strainer Snap CapCorningCatalog #352235
ReagentTungsten Carbide Straight 11.5 cm Fine Scissors Fine Science ToolsCatalog #14558-11
ReagentNaCl (5 M) RNase-freeThermo Fisher ScientificCatalog #AM9759
ReagentNoyes Spring Scissors - Tungsten CarbideFine Science ToolsCatalog #15514-12
Before start

Sampling and storage for nuclear isolation.
Animals must be appropriately euthanized and immediately processed. Approximately ~Amount60 mg of salmonid tissue is placed in one clearly labelled cryotube and immediately flash frozen in liquid nitrogen. This step is critical. The tissue must be preserved as fast as possible for optimal results. In the absence of liquid nitrogen, samples can be frozen in dry ice. Samples can be stored at Temperature-80 °C for up to a year prior to use. Older samples might still yield viable nuclei but this would need to be tested.


All reagents should be chilled on ice prior to use.
Samples should be kept frozen on dry ice until immediately before nuclei isolation, and all sample-handling steps should be performed on ice.
The centrifuge should be pre chilled at Temperature4 °C .

Nucleus isolation workflow for ST-based buffers
Nucleus isolation workflow for ST-based buffers
30m
30m

Note
Samples should be kept frozen on dry ice until immediately before nuclei isolation, and all sample-handling steps should be performed TemperatureOn ice . The centrifuge should be pre-chilled at Temperature4 °C .

TemperatureOn ice , place a piece of frozen tissue into one well of a 6-well tissue culture plate with Amount1 mL TST.

Note
If the sample is stuck to the cryotube, remove using tweezers, preferably while still in dry ice, and place immediately into the culture plate with TST.

TemperatureOn ice , mince tissue initially using Tungsten Carbide scissors for Duration00:00:30 and then with Noyes Spring Scissors ReagentNoyes Spring Scissors - Tungsten CarbideVWR InternationalCatalog #15514-12 for a total of Duration00:10:00 .

Note
This step is only necessary for fin, skin or similar hard tissues, for softer tissues just use spring scissors for Duration00:10:00 .

10m 30s
Duration00:05:00 into the mincing gently pipette up and down with a p1000 pipette using a low retention filtered tip. The time in the dissociation buffer is critical. See image for how to assess the timing is correct by looking at your nuclei.
Image from different dissociation trials in Atlantic salmon tissues x40 magnification stained with trypan blue. A. Head kidney nuclei not had sufficient time in dissociation buffer, will clog microfluidic device. B. Blood nuclei perfectly dissociated minimal clumping ideal for sequencing. C. Liver nuclei to long in dissociation buffer, nuclear membrane started to degrade. Can still be sequenced but not ideal. Note when staining nuclei with trypan blue asses nuclear quality as soon as possible as the nuclei will quickly degrade when not on ice.

5m
Pipetting
Critical
Pass lysate through a Thikness40 µm cell strainer .

Add a further Amount1 mL of TST to the cell strainer immediately.
Pipetting
Add Amount3 mL of freshly prepared ST buffer to the lysate.

Pipetting
Add the Amount5 mL of lysate to a marked 15 ml falcon tube (Corning) on ice.

Pipetting
Centrifuge at Centrifigation500 x g, 4°C, 00:05:00 in a swinging bucket centrifuge.

5m
Centrifigation
Resuspend the pellet gently using a p1000 pipette in PBS-BSA.
Note
Resuspension volume depends on the size of the pellet, usually within the range of Amount100 µL - Amount500 µL (Amount1 mL if there are many nuclei). For skin and fin, Amount200 µL is recommended.


Pipetting
Filter the nucleus solution a second time.
Note
The size of the filter is tissue dependant, e.g. for tissues such as liver and head kidney a Thikness40 µm Falcon™ cell strainer will suffice, whereas for gill, a Thikness30 µm filter would be better giving the higher amount of tough debris that could clog the microfluidic device. In addition, for harder tissues that produce a lot of debris such as fin and skin (this is due to the presence of fat layers and scales in skin and the presence of bones in the fin) then Thikness20 µm is recommended. The lysate may not pass through at once, pipetting very gently up and down with a wide bore pipette can help it through.


Count the nuclei using a C-chip disposable haemocytometer.
Note
In this step, it is also possible to visualise the nuclei and ascertain the level of debris present as well as the integrity of the nuclear membrane.

The nuclei are also counted using a Bio-Rad TC20 to confirm results from the disposable haemocytometer and to count the proportion of viable cells.
Note
Nuclei are identified as “dead”, therefore a good nuclei isolation will have a small percentage of live cells. 1-4% of live cells is ideal, but below 12% is acceptable. High proportions of live cells indicates incomplete nuclear isolation.

Load the nucleus suspension into a Chromium Chip and into the Chromium Controller, aiming to recover 7,000 nuclei as per 10x recommendations with a concentration of between 700 to 1200 nuclei per µl.
Note
In the case of some tissues such as fin, readjust the target recovery to 5000 especially with juvenile fish for which nuclei yields are sometimes low.

Citations
Drokhlyansky E, Smillie CS, Van Wittenberghe N, Ericsson M, Griffin GK, Eraslan G, Dionne D, Cuoco MS, Goder-Reiser MN, Sharova T, Kuksenko O, Aguirre AJ, Boland GM, Graham D, Rozenblatt-Rosen O, Xavier RJ, Regev A. The Human and Mouse Enteric Nervous System at Single-Cell Resolution.
https://doi.org/10.1016/j.cell.2020.08.003
Linnarsson S, Teichmann SA. Single-cell genomics: coming of age.
https://doi.org/10.1186/s13059-016-0960-x
Slyper M, Porter CBM, Ashenberg O, Waldman J, Drokhlyansky E, Wakiro I, Smillie C, Smith-Rosario G, Wu J, Dionne D, Vigneau S, Jané-Valbuena J, Tickle TL, Napolitano S, Su MJ, Patel AG, Karlstrom A, Gritsch S, Nomura M, Waghray A, Gohil SH, Tsankov AM, Jerby-Arnon L, Cohen O, Klughammer J, Rosen Y, Gould J, Nguyen L, Hofree M, Tramontozzi PJ, Li B, Wu CJ, Izar B, Haq R, Hodi FS, Yoon CH, Hata AN, Baker SJ, Suvà ML, Bueno R, Stover EH, Clay MR, Dyer MA, Collins NB, Matulonis UA, Wagle N, Johnson BE, Rotem A, Rozenblatt-Rosen O, Regev A. A single-cell and single-nucleus RNA-Seq toolbox for fresh and frozen human tumors.
https://doi.org/10.1038/s41591-020-0844-1