1. Academic Validation
  2. Generation of a Transgenic Zebrafish Line for In Vivo Assessment of Hepatic Apoptosis

Generation of a Transgenic Zebrafish Line for In Vivo Assessment of Hepatic Apoptosis

  • Pharmaceuticals (Basel). 2021 Oct 31;14(11):1117. doi: 10.3390/ph14111117.
Aina Higuchi 1 Eri Wakai 1 Tomoko Tada 2 Junko Koiwa 1 Yuka Adachi 1 Takashi Shiromizu 1 Hidemasa Goto 3 Toshio Tanaka 4 Yuhei Nishimura 1
Affiliations

Affiliations

  • 1 Department of Integrative Pharmacology, Mie University Graduate School of Medicine, Tsu 514-8507, Mie, Japan.
  • 2 Ise Red Cross Hospital, Ise 516-8512, Mie, Japan.
  • 3 Department of Histology and Cell Biology, Mie University Graduate School of Medicine, Tsu 514-8507, Mie, Japan.
  • 4 Department of Systems Pharmacology, Mie University Graduate School of Medicine, Tsu 514-8507, Mie, Japan.
Abstract

Hepatic Apoptosis is involved in a variety of pathophysiologic conditions in the liver, including hepatitis, steatosis, and drug-induced liver injury. The development of easy-to-perform and reliable in vivo assays would thus greatly enhance the efforts to understand liver diseases and identify associated genes and potential drugs. In this study, we developed a transgenic zebrafish line that was suitable for the assessment of Caspase 3 activity in the liver by using in vivo fluorescence imaging. The larvae of transgenic zebrafish dominantly expressed Casper3GR in the liver under control of the promoter of the phosphoenolpyruvate carboxykinase 1 gene. Casper3GR is composed of two fluorescent proteins, tagGFP and tagRFP, which are connected via a peptide linker that can be cleaved by activated Caspase 3. Under tagGFP excitation conditions in zebrafish that were exposed to the well-characterized hepatotoxicant isoniazid, we detected increased and decreased fluorescence associated with tagGFP and tagRFP, respectively. This result suggests that isoniazid activates Caspase 3 in the zebrafish liver, which digests the linker between tagGFP and tagRFP, resulting in a reduction in the Förster resonance energy transfer to tagRFP upon tagGFP excitation. We also detected isoniazid-induced inhibition of Caspase 3 activity in zebrafish that were treated with the hepatoprotectants ursodeoxycholic acid and obeticholic acid. The transgenic zebrafish that were developed in this study could be a powerful tool for identifying both hepatotoxic and hepatoprotective drugs, as well as for analyzing the effects of the genes of interest to hepatic Apoptosis.

Keywords

Förster resonance energy transfer; apoptosis; caspase; drug-induced liver injury; hepatoprotectant; in vivo fluorescence imaging; liver; zebrafish.

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