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Robotic injection of zebrafish embryos for high-throughput screening in disease models

Authors: 
Spaink HP, Cui C, Wiweger MI, Jansen HJ, Veneman WJ, MarĂ­n-Juez R, de Sonneville J, Ordas A, Torraca V, van der Ent W, Leenders WP, Meijer AH, Snaar-Jagalska BE, Dirks RP
Citation: 
Methods. 2013 Jun 11. doi:pii: S1046-2023(13)00203-X. 10.1016/j.ymeth.2013.06.002. [Epub ahead of print]
Abstract: 
The increasing use of zebrafish larvae for biomedical research applications is resulting in versatile models for a variety of human diseases. These models exploit the optical transparency of zebrafish larvae and the availability of a large genetic tool box. Here we present detailed protocols for the robotic injection of zebrafish embryos at very high accuracy with a speed of up to 2000 embryos per hour. These protocols are benchmarked for several applications: (1) the injection of DNA for obtaining transgenic animals, (2) the injection of antisense morpholinos that can be used for gene knock-down, (3) the injection of microbes for studying infectious disease, and (4) the injection of human cancer cells as a model for tumor progression. We show examples of how the injected embryos can be screened at high-throughput level using fluorescence analysis. Our methods open up new avenues for the use of zebrafish larvae for large compounds screens in the search for new medicines.
Organism or Cell Type: 
zebrafish
Delivery Method: 
Microinjection