CZ
Biohub SF scientists Loïc Royer (left) and Merlin Lange work on a light-sheet
microscope designed and built at the Biohub. Credit: Dale Ramos
When
early cartographers undertook perilous expeditions to map unknown corners of
the world with sextants, compasses, and hand-drawn diagrams, it's unlikely they
imagined that someday anyone with an internet connection would have access to a
seamless view of the entire planet from the comfort of their own home.
Today, pioneering scientists are working
to create a similar experience for a much tinier, but no less important domain:
developing embryos. The goal is to track and map the behavior of each and every
cell working together to create an adult lifeform, and present that map in a
clickable, navigable display—a sort of Google Earth for developmental biology.
Now,
in a paper published in Cell,
researchers at the Chan Zuckerberg Biohub San Francisco (CZ Biohub SF) are
unveiling the latest advancements in that effort.
"Zebrahub"
is a state-of-the-art cell atlas that combines high-resolution time-lapse
videos of newly emerging cells in zebrafish embryos with extensive data on
which genes are switched on and off as individual cells navigate to their
eventual stations and "decide" what role they will ultimately play in
the body of the adult fish.
A freshwater species native
to South Asia, zebrafish as adults rarely exceed two inches in length, and they
are a long-established model for developmental research relevant to human
health.
About
70% of human genes have
counterparts in zebrafish and, though we look quite different, as fellow
vertebrates we share most of the same overall body plan in addition to the
cellular and molecular processes by which various body parts initially form.
Critically, zebrafish embryos are
also mostly transparent and—unlike those of, say, mice—develop outside the
mother, making it possible for scientists to observe their early growth in
detail under a microscope.
Creating Zebrahub,
which is free to all and includes built-in analytical tools designed for
biologists, required building a suite of new instruments and software. It's the
most comprehensive atlas of its kind and, as the researchers write in the
paper, an important step towards "ushering in a new era for developmental
and evolutionary biology."
"How a lifeform goes from a single cell to an entire body is one of biology's biggest mysteries," said senior author Loïc Royer, leader of the Organismal Architecture group and director of imaging AI at CZ Biohub SF. "With Zebrahub, we've created possibly the most detailed map of that process ever."
A zebrafish embryo at 20 hours of development,
captured with a light-sheet microscope designed and built at CZ Biohub San
Francisco. Credit: CZ Biohub San Francisco
The complexity of life
To form a complex adult organism
such as a human or fish, a fertilized egg must split into a set of progeny that
continue dividing until millions of cells have been born and have assumed their
roles as parts of the skin, liver, brain, and all the other components of the
body.
While, for the most part, all cells
of an embryo contain an identical set of genes, the way that each type of cell
uses these genes—switching them on and off in different combinations at
different timepoints—is unique.
Scientists have long pondered just
how the "choices" regarding thousands of genes in millions of cells
come together to create a fully functioning adult lifeform with many types of
specialized tissues. Each advancement towards solving this daunting puzzle
yields new insights about why the process sometimes goes wrong, leading to
disorders and disease.
But even with powerful models like
zebrafish, developmental biology has historically been conducted in a piecemeal
fashion, limited by the complexity of examining events far too tiny to see, and
happening by the millions across the bodies of fragile living organisms that
can be easily damaged by the very experiments designed to understand them.
As in the early days of
cartography—before satellites snapped pictures of Earth from space and cars
with spinning cameras mapped our streets—the field has made its breakthroughs
in fits and starts, and has lacked a comprehensive system for considering the
whole instead of just the pieces.
With Zebrahub, researchers at CZ
Biohub SF hope to help change that, accelerating the field by giving
researchers easy access to the breadth of these processes, all in one place.
Thanks
to a new set of laboratory procedures developed
at CZ Biohub SF, Zebrahub is also one of the first datasets of its kind to
include gene expression data specific to individual
embryos, as the process of collecting such data has typically required
researchers to pool DNA from multiple embryos together.
This means
Zebrahub confers the added benefit of allowing scientists to investigate the
subtle expression differences that might give rise to different health outcomes
among sibling fish.
"Zebrahub offers one of the first opportunities to investigate the behavior of cells in the extremely complex process of development with extremely high precision," says Merlin Lange, a CZ Biohub SF senior staff scientist and first author of the new Cell paper. "It's very rare to combine both gene expression from individual cells and spatial mapping of cells over time in the same resource like this."
This color-coded data visualization helps
scientists understand how gene expression changes across thousands of
developing cells at once. As cells change their identity — measured by which
genes are switching on or off at any given moment — they move into different
parts of the map representing different types of tissue within an embryo.
Credit: Lange et al., Cell, 2024
Details in motion
Zebrahub features two major
datasets, along with a suite of tools designed to help biologists use them. The
first offers time-lapse video microscopy showing the birth and early movements
of most cells in a zebrafish embryo in the first 24 hours after fertilization,
during which time organs start to form. The second provides data on which genes
were active in more than 120,000 zebrafish cells at 10 separate time points
during the embryos' first 10 days.
To create the time-lapse videos,
Royer, Lange, and CZ Biohub SF scientists and engineers designed and built
"DaXi" (pronounced "dah-shee"), a new kind of
automated microscope with a field of view large enough to capture images of
entire living embryos.
DaXi is a so-called light-sheet
microscope that emits and captures light in a unique way designed to protect
embryos from high-intensity laser beams that would damage or even kill the
embryo after a short period of time.
Then, to allow scientists to easily
use the captured videos to study specific cells, CZ Biohub SF software engineer
Jordão Bragantini led the development of a sophisticated
new program called Ultrack, which automatically identifies cell nuclei (typically the most
distinctive landmark in a cell) and tracks their movements in the videos over
time in three-dimensional space.
Combined, the datasets generated by
these tools allow researchers to conduct "virtual experiments"
examining where cells begin and end up during development—even running their
developmental trajectory backward and forward in time.
In just developing this
methodology, the Zebrahub team has already made some intriguing discoveries.
For example, the team looked at a subset of cells in the embryo's tail called
neuro-mesodermal progenitors, which, at the timepoints they examined, had previously
been thought to only be able to give rise to one type of tissue.
However, as the Zebrahub researchers analyzed the cells' movement and expansion, they realized these cells were actually developing into both muscle cells and neurons that were integrating into the spinal cord.
Ultrack, a sophisticated new program from CZ
Biohub SF, automatically tracks an embryo's rapidly multiplying cell population
as cells divide, migrate, and develop into their final states. Credit: Lange et
al., Cell, 2024
"This was a very unexpected
finding," Lange said. "And it's the kind of thing that would be hard
to confirm without the broad view that Zebrahub provides."
Zebrahub, which has been available
online to researchers for just over a year, has already helped support
discoveries from other labs. One team that included researchers from Ashland
University in Ohio and the State University of New York in Albany used Zebrahub
in concert with their own cell atlas to ask which cellular proteins might
contribute to the formation of cataracts in the eye.
For this, the researchers relied on
Zebrahub's gene expression database to see when
the cells of the lens activate and deactivate certain genes in a way that might lead to problems.
"Zebrafish are really small,
and it's really difficult for us to peel the lens apart in order to ask
questions about what genes are working in this region and how one cell might be
different from another," said Mason Posner, a professor of biology at
Ashland and co-senior author of the study. Here, "that's already been done
for us and we can get these deep understandings about, for example, how this
tissue even becomes transparent and functions, essentially, as biological
glass."
A project five years in the making, Zebrahub required the development of numerous new technologies to achieve and relied on experts in the fields of biology, engineering, optics, physics, and data science housed under the roof of CZ Biohub SF. Every piece of technology developed in the process is open-source, which will contribute to more data being added to the project as the community works together to improve our view of embryo development.
by Chan Zuckerberg Biohub
Source: Zebrahub: New atlas tracks zebrafish development like never before
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