Elsevier

Developmental Biology

Volume 441, Issue 1, 1 September 2018, Pages 4-11
Developmental Biology

Short Communication
Live imaging of collagen deposition during skin development and repair in a collagen I – GFP fusion transgenic zebrafish line

https://doi.org/10.1016/j.ydbio.2018.06.001Get rights and content
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open access

Highlights

  • A GFP-collagen I transgenic zebrafish has been generated for live, in vivo, imaging.

  • Collagen fibrils are initially deposited randomly beneath the developing epidermis.

  • This random collagen array subsequently becomes orthogonally aligned.

  • Collagen I deposition following larval wounding recapitulates developmental deposition.

  • Expression of GFP-collagen enables study of collagen dynamics in health and disease.

Abstract

Fibrillar collagen is a major component of many tissues but has been difficult to image in vivo using transgenic approaches because of problems associated with establishing cells and organisms that generate GFP-fusion collagens that can polymerise into functional fibrils. Here we have developed and characterised GFP and mCherry collagen-I fusion zebrafish lines with basal epidermal-specific expression. We use these lines to reveal the dynamic nature of collagen-I fibril deposition beneath the developing embryonic epidermis, as well as the repair of this collagen meshwork following wounding. Transmission electron microscope studies show that these transgenic lines faithfully reproduce the collagen ultrastructure present in wild type larval skin. During skin development we show that collagen I is deposited by basal epidermal cells initially in fine filaments that are largely randomly orientated but are subsequently aligned into a cross-hatch, orthogonal sub-epithelial network by embryonic day 4. Following skin wounding, we see that sub-epidermal collagen is re-established in the denuded domain, initially as randomly orientated wisps that subsequently become bonded to the undamaged collagen and aligned in a way that recapitulates developmental deposition of sub-epidermal collagen. Crossing our GFP-collagen line against one with tdTomato marking basal epidermal cell membranes reveals how much more rapidly wound re-epithelialisation occurs compared to the re-deposition of collagen beneath the healed epidermis. By use of other tissue specific drivers it will be possible to establish zebrafish lines to enable live imaging of collagen deposition and its remodelling in various other organs in health and disease.

Keywords

Collagen-I
Zebrafish larvae
Live imaging
Skin
Wound healing

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