Edinburgh Research Explorer Modelling of human Wiskott-Aldrich syndrome protein mutants in zebrafish larvae using in vivo live imaging

Wiskott–Aldrich syndrome (WAS) and X-linked neutropenia (XLN) are immunodeficiencies in which the function of several haematopoietic cell lineages is perturbed as a result of mutations in the actin regulator WASp. From in vitro cell biology experiments


Introduction
Cells of the innate immune system depend on a precisely regulated actin cytoskeleton to drive a coordinated response to tissue damage and infection and to clear pathogens at sites of infection.From cell surface receptor through to actin nucleator, each component step in cytoskeletal regulation plays a pivotal role in enabling normal immune cell function.
Wiskott-Aldrich syndrome (WAS) protein WASp coordinates actin polymerisation via the Arp2/3 complex downstream of Cdc42 and kinase phosphorylation.Innate immune cells deficient in WASp, including neutrophils and macrophages, have been shown to display abnormal chemotaxis, motility and phagocytosis in vitro (Thrasher and Burns, 2010;Tsuboi and Meerloo, 2007).For example, tissue culture studies reveal that WASp-deficient macrophages fail to respond to chemotactic cues due to reduced persistence of directed protrusions (Ishihara et al., 2012;Zicha et al., 1998).They are also defective at phagocytosis of bacteria and apoptotic cells (Leverrier et al., 2001;Lorenzi et al., 2000).
Several studies indicate a correlation between the clinical phenotype of WAS and the nature of the inherited mutation (Jin et al., 2004), with truncated or abolished WASp expression coinciding with the most severe cases (Ochs and Thrasher, 2006).In contrast, X-linked Neutropenia (XLN) in patients, results from constitutively active mutations in WASp, and presents with congenital neutropenia (Ancliff et al., 2006;Devriendt et al., 2001).
We have shown that the WASp protein is conserved in zebrafish and using a morpholino knockdown approach we previously reported that WASp deficient neutrophils and macrophages exhibit defects in their capacity to migrate towards a fin wound, suggesting that WASp function is conserved in fish (Cvejic et al., 2008).In this study we characterise a null mutant of zebrafish WASp, which shows defects in both the wound-induced inflammatory response and in immune-cell-mediated resistance to bacterial infection, thus mimicking the symptoms of human WAS patients.We then use transgenic replacement with a range of human WASp mutants using the Gal4:UAS system in order to observe how various human mutations affect innate immune cell behaviour in vivo.

Results and Discussion
Because zebrafish larvae are translucent we are able to live image and characterise the behaviour of WASp deficient innate immune cells in an in vivo context.We first characterise leukocyte behaviour in a zebrafish WASp null mutant (Fig. 1A) derived by TILLing (Cvejic et al., 2008), which we then use as a background line to investigate a series of human WASp alleles.
The WASp mutant has normal numbers of leukocytes but they are defective in their ability to migrate to wounds In humans, WASp is a haematopoietic cell restricted protein.We show that at the mRNA and protein levels, zebrafish WASp1 expression coincides with the leukocyte marker Lysozyme C (supplementary material Fig. S1A,B).We also confirm that WASp1 mutant larvae have normal numbers and distribution of neutrophils and macrophages (supplementary material Fig. S1C,D), just as observed in most human WAS patients.However, our wounding studies revealed reduced recruitment of both lineages at all time points from 30 minutes to 24 hours (Fig. 1C,D).Tracking analysis of mpx:GFP + neutrophil migration in WASp1 mutants indicated increased frequency of 'pausing' and decreased cell velocity during migratory periods, but no significant increase in 'meandering' of tracks to the wound (Fig. 1E).We show that these alterations in migration are, at least in part, due to inefficiency in forming and maintaining new leading pseudopods in both paused and migrating cells, en route to wounds (Fig. 1F,G).WASp null cells also exhibited a reduced level of uropod retraction as they migrate towards the wound (Fig. 1H).We presume that all of these defects in cell migration to a wound are due to WASpmediated influences on the cytoskeleton, but WASp proteins can also regulate endocytosis and there is precedent for endocytosis to dramatically influence the reading of chemotactic signals and so we cannot rule out this possibility (Je ´kely et al., 2005).There is a second WASp orthologue in zebrafish with less sequence homology to hWASp (Cvejic et al., 2008), but we saw no further migration defect after knockdown of this orthologue on a WASp mutant background (supplementary material Fig. S2).

Dissecting the function of specific human WASp mutants in WASp null zebrafish
Having confirmed that WASp1 2/2 fish appear to model features of human WASp deficiency, we wondered whether hWASp might rescue these defects and whether we might use zebrafish larvae as a 'window' through which to observe cell behaviours in a range of hWASp lesions (Fig. 2A; supplementary material Movie 1).Immediately obvious, and mirroring the neutropenic phenotype of XLN patients, we found that expression of a constitutively active form of hWASp I294T (Ancliff et al., 2006), using the neutrophilspecific Lysozyme C (lyz) promoter in otherwise WASp mutant fish, leads to a reduced overall number of neutrophils (Fig. 2B) in unwounded fish.We found that transgenic expression of full-length hWASp, again in otherwise WASp mutant fish, rescues both the numbers of neutrophils recruited to a wound (Fig. 2C) and their velocity and pause times en route to the wound (Fig. 2D).By contrast, transgenic expression of WASp Y291F , a phospho-dead mutant form of hWASp (Blundell et al., 2009), provided minimal improvement in neutrophil migration above the WASp mutant background (Fig. 2C), and this was mirrored in our movie analysis where we saw marginally slower migration of individual neutrophils (Fig. 2D) and concommitantly reduced protrusion dynamics (Fig. 2E).By contrast, when we expressed WASp H246D in neutrophils, which cannot bind Cdc42 (Kato et al., 1999), we saw improvement in cell motility and recruitment to a level close to that in WT larvae (Fig. 2C) and normal protrusive outgrowth (Fig. 2E; supplementary material Movie 1) but with marginally reduced uropod retraction (Fig. 2E).Analysis of movies of the remaining neutrophils expressing the constitutively active form of hWASp I294T (supplementary material Movie 1) showed these cells to be hyperprotrusive when responding to a wound, and with significantly increased velocity and increased protrusion and uropod retraction rates (Fig. 2D,E); we have seen a similar compensatory effect on migration in Drosophila macrophages mutant in Cdc42, which exhibited defects in cell polarisation, but with increased migratory velocity compared with WT cells (Stramer et al., 2005).We suggest that the more muted inflammatory response to wounds in these constitutively active WASp transgenic 'rescues' is largely due to the reduced number of responding neutrophils, rather than a retarded migratory capacity and this may reflect how the inflammatory process is also perturbed in XLN patients.
The WASp mutant also models susceptibility to bacterial infection, just as in human patients Patients with WAS and XLN are prone to bacterial infections.We observed that WASp 2/2 juveniles are more prone to opportunistic bacterial infection and subsequent death  Wiskott-Aldrich syndrome Zebrafish model 4081 (Fig. 3A).To investigate the degree of resistance of WASp mutants to bacterial infection, we challenged larvae with a systemic S. aureus infection, injected into the circulation at 52 hpf, at a dose previously shown to cause staggered larval death over 72 hours post injection (hpi) (Prajsnar et al., 2008).This revealed increased susceptibility to bacterial infection in WASp mutants (Fig. 3B) and greater bacterial burden (Fig. 3C).
In control WT fish, live imaging showed that most of the phagocytosis of circulating microbes, is accomplished by macrophages (Fig. 4A) (Colucci-Guyon et al., 2011) and commences almost immediately upon loading the circulation with S. aureus (supplementary material Movie 2).Using a 'punctae analysis' image quantification technique, we observed a clear delay in phagocytosis after 30 minutes in WASp mutant larvae, leading to a significant defect in clearance by 24 hpi (Fig. 4B-E) which explains their increased larval death rate.We saw no additional defect when we used morpholino knockdown WASp2 (data not shown).We found that transgenic expression of full-length hWASp in macrophages, using a csf1a promoter, in otherwise WASp mutant fish, rescues phagocytic uptake of microbes at both these timepoints to levels approaching WT (Fig. 4C,E).We next developed a more direct assay of phagocytosis without infection, utilising bioparticles that fluoresce only on acidification post phagocytic uptake (Fig. 4F; supplementary material Movie 3) (Brubaker et al., 2013).We used this assay to test the capacity of two of the hWASp mutant alleles investigated in our neutrophil motility 'rescue', but this time using the PU.1 promoter to drive them in macrophages.Our data here suggest a significantly increased 'rescue' of phagocytosis in cells expressing WASp Y291F , the phosphodead mutant form of hWASp, above the WASp null background (Fig. 4G), whereas Cdc42 signalling seems absolutely essential because when we expressed WASp H246D , which cannot bind Cdc42, in otherwise WASp null macrophages, we saw no improvement in particle uptake (Fig. 4G).
This disassociation of Cdc42 activation and phosphorylation status of WASp has been reported previously and there is precedent from in vitro studies that WASp phosphorylation can occur independently of Cdc42 binding in cell migration and other WASp-dependent functions, whereas Cdc42 is essential for WASp-regulated phagocytosis (Badour et al., 2004;Cory et al., 2002;Park and Cox, 2009).
Overall, our data establish a model for investigating WASp function in vivo and reveal the potential for live imaging the effects of various human WAS disease-related mutations using zebrafish larvae as host 'windows' for observing immune cell behaviours.To our knowledge, this is the first occasion where a range of human disease alleles have been transgenically expressed and comparatively live imaged using zebrafish larvae in this way.

Zebrafish lines and maintenance
Adult zebrafish were maintained in standard conditions; breeding and genotyping were carried out according to standard protocols (Westerfield, 2000).Embryos were maintained at 28˚C in 0.36 Danieu's solution.For strains generated and used in this study, see supplementary material Table S1.

Leukocyte staining
Sudan Black staining was used to reveal neutrophils (Cvejic et al., 2008), and a pan-leukocytic antibody, L-Plastin was used to stain for all leukocytes as previously described (Redd et al., 2006).

Tail-fin wounding
Mechanical wounding was performed as previously described (Cvejic et al., 2008); in brief, 3 dpf larvae were anaesthetised and their ventral tail fin wounded using a tungsten needle (Fig. 1B).
Infection protocol 1 nl of 1.2610 9 cfu ml 21 GFP-expressing S. aureus or 2 mg/ml pHrodo-S.aureus BioPaticles (Invitrogen), resuspended in PBS, were microinjected into the Duct of Cuvier of anaesthetised 52 dpf larvae.For live S. aureus injections, WT and mutant larvae were monitored over the course of 3 days until 5 dpf.Dead larvae were counted and removed at 24 hour post injection (hpi), 48 hpi and 72 hpi.To measure bacterial burden, individual 4 hpi, 10 hpi and 24 hpi larvae were processed for cfu analysis using an adaption of a previous protocol (Prajsnar et al., 2008), whereby each larva was first lysed in 400 ul 0.5% Triton X-100 and plated on a 90 mm LB agar plate.

In vivo live imaging
Live imaging was performed according to our previously published protocol.(Cvejic et al., 2008).A widefield Leica DMIRB inverted microscope was used to take movies for tracking studies and an Ultraview Spinning Disk Confocal imaging system with a 636 glycerol lens was used for protrusion/retraction analysis.

Image acquisition and quantification
Quantification of phagocytosed bacterial/BioParticle burden was performed on images of fixed, infected larval flanks, captured on a confocal microscope using 206 lens.Images were processed using Volocity (Improvision) software with GFP + /RFP + bacterial clumps identified using s.d.intensity (12,s.d.,170).Parameters were refined to isolate large phagosomes over individual bacterium/ BioParticles by setting a size threshold .5 mm.The manual tracking function of Volocity 5.0 (Improvision) was used to track neutrophil migration.Quantification of new protrusive areas and uropod retraction was performed using NIH ImageJ 1.42q software.On conversion of the movie to 8-bit greyscale, the movie was duplicated.In the duplicate copy the first frame was removed and a blank frame added at the end.Using the 'Image calculator' function the duplicate movie was subtracted from the original to reveal the new protrusive area; the reverse process was applied for retraction analysis.Following inversion of the image, the protrusive/retracted areas (mm 2 ) could be calculated using the function 'Analyse particles'.For paused cell movie analysis, the cell was divided in half, front and back, using the location of wound as a reference point, before calculation of areas were performed.
Construction of vectors for generating transgenic fish for each hWASp mutant cDNAs for each eGFP-WASp mutant were cloned in frame between (NheI, ClaI) sites of the transgenic parental vector pBH-UASmsc, which contains the Tol2 sequence and a mlc promoter driven mCherry as transgene screen marker (kindly provided by Michael Nonet, Washington University).All the constructs were sequenced to verify their coding sequences.
For each of our rescue experiments we have tested, as far as is possible, whether physiologically relevant levels of transgenic hWASp mRNAs/proteins are being expressed, by semi-quantitive RT-PCR (bands of similar intensity in WT and rescued larvae, supplementary material Fig. S1E), and immunostaining (data not shown), although absolute comparisons are not possible because we use different antibodies to image the zebrafish and human WASp proteins.

Production of WASp1 antibody
Zebrafish WASp1 cDNA fragment (1-699) was cloned into pGEX in frame.pGEX-zfWASp (1-699) was used to express a zfWASp-GST fusion protein in E. coli BL21 following the standard manufacturer's protocol.zfWASp was affinity purified using a Gluthathione Sepharose 4B column, and the final protein was sent to David's Biotechnologie (Germany) for production of rabbit polyclonal antibody.The specificity of the received zfWASp1 anti-serum was confirmed by ELISA.

Fig. 2 .
Fig. 2. The Zebrafish WASp mutant can be rescued to varying degrees by introduction of WT hWASp and clinical WASp mutants.(A) Schematic of hWASp indicating the various mutant constructs for attempted rescue of the zebrafish mutant phenotype.(B) (i) lyz:Gal4-VP16 UAS:Kaede to reveal neutrophils (green), shows evidence of neutropenia only in the flanks of -/hWASp I294T 'rescued larvae' with (ii) quantification of neutrophil deficiency by measurement of total neutrophil area in the hematopoietic region.(C) Degree of 'rescue' of neutrophil recruitment at 2 hours post wounding, after expression of hWASp constructs in the mutant background.(D) Tracking analysis of neutrophils following expression of each of the hWASp mutant constructs: (i) Quantification of the velocity of migrating cells (mm/sec), and (ii) pause duration (seconds), and pause number (in brackets).(E) Example still images from confocal time-lapse movies to illustrate protrusion analysis (magenta) applied to migrating hWASp mutant 'rescues' (see supplementary material Movie 1).Direction of the wound indicated by white arrow.(F) Quantification of rate of protrusion (i) and retraction (ii) in migrating hWASp mutant 'rescues'.Error bars (s.d); asterisks denote significance values of *P,0.05,**P,0.01 and ***P,0.001by one-way ANOVA.Scale bars: 100 mm (B); 10 mm (E).

Fig. 4 .
Fig. 4. WASp mutant larvae show a delay in phagocytosis and defective clearance of S. aureus.(A) (i) Representative image of an infected larva.Arrowhead indicates injection site.(ii) GFP + clumps of phagocytosed S. aureus visible in flank region (corresponding to white rectangle in i).(iii) Further magnification (corresponding to white square in ii) reveals a cluster of macrophages (blue) and neutrophils (magenta) with phagocytosed S. aureus (green) visible only within the macrophage population; (iv) application of punctae analysis using Volocity enables quantification of phagocytosed (as opposed to individual, not yet engulfed) S. aureus.(B) Representative images of bacterial punctae analysis in flanks of WT (+/+) versus mutant (2/2) larvae, revealing a delay in initial engulfment at 0.5 hpi, catch up by 2 hpi, but eventual failure to clear the phagocytosed bacteria at 24 hpi, in the mutant.(C-E) Scatter plots of (i) numbers of S. aureus punctae and (ii) total volume of S. aureus punctae (mm 3 ) in flanks of WT versus mutant larvae at.Successful rescue of mutant defect at (C) 0.5 hpi and (E) 24 hpi following macrophage-specific re-expression of hWASp WT under csf1a:Gal4.(F) (i) Confocal image of PU1:GFP-positive macrophages (green) in the haematopoietic region of 2 dpf larva 30 minutes post injection of pHrodo S. aureus Bioparticles (red).(ii) Stills from a time-lapse movie, illustrating increasing fluorescence of a single pHrodo bioparticle following acidification in the macrophage phagosome (see supplementary material Movie 3).Arrows in single channel series indicate phagosome as it becomes acidified.(G) Scatter plots of numbers of pHrodo S. aureus bioparticle punctae (i), and total volume of punctae (mm3) (ii), in flanks of WT, mutant and hWASp mutant 'rescued' larvae at 0.5 hpi.Error bars indicate s.d.; *P,0.05,**P,0.01 and ***P,0.001via Student's t-test (D) and one-way ANOVA (C,E,G).Scale bars: 200 mm (Ai); 100 mm (Aii,B); 10 mm (Aiii); 50 mm (Fi); 5 mm (Fii).