Wawrzyniak Marta K, Matas Serrato Lluìs Albert, Blanchoud Simon
Department of Biology, University of Fribourg, Chemin Du Musée 10, 1700, Fribourg, Switzerland.
Department of Biology, University of Fribourg, Chemin Du Musée 10, 1700, Fribourg, Switzerland.
Dev Biol. 2021 Dec;480:91-104. doi: 10.1016/j.ydbio.2021.08.005. Epub 2021 Aug 18.
Tunicates are highly diverse marine invertebrate filter-feeders that are vertebrates' closest relatives. These organisms, despite a drastically different body plan during their adulthood, have a tissue complexity related to that of vertebrates. Ascidians, which compose most of the Tunicata, are benthic sessile hermaphrodites that reproduce sexually through a motile tadpole larval stage. Over half of the known ascidians species are able to reproduce asexually by budding, typically leading to the formation of colonies where animals, called zooids, are interconnected through an external vascular system. In addition, colonial ascidians are established models for important biological processes including allorecognition, immunobiology, aging, angiogenesis and whole-body regeneration. However, the current paucity in breeding infrastructures limits the study of these animals to coastal regions. To promote a wider scientific spreading and popularity of colonial ascidians, we have developed a flexible recirculating husbandry setup for their long-term in-lab culture. Our system is inspired both by the flow-through aquariums used by coastal ascidian labs, as well as by the recirculating in-lab systems used for zebrafish research. Our hybrid system thus combines colony breeding, water filtering and food culturing in a semi-automated system where specimens develop on hanging microscopy glass slides. Temperature, light/dark cycles, flow speed and feeding rates can be controlled independently in four different breeding environments to provide room for species-specific optimization as well as for running experiments. This setup is complemented with a quarantine for the acclimatization of wild isolates. Herein we present our success in breeding Botrylloides diegensis, a species of colonial ascidians, for more than 3 years in recirculating artificial seawater over 600 km away from their natural habitat. We show that colonies adapt well to in-lab culturing provided that a suitable marine microbiome is present, and that a specific strain can be isolated, propagated and efficiently used for research over prolonged periods of time. The flexible and modular structure of our system can be scaled and adapted to the needs of specific species, such as Botryllus schlosseri, as well as of particular laboratory spaces. Overall, we show that Botrylloides diegensis can be proficiently bred in-land and suggest that our results can be extended to other species of colonial ascidians to promote research on these fascinating animals.
被囊动物是种类极为多样的海洋无脊椎动物滤食者,是脊椎动物的近亲。这些生物尽管成年期身体结构截然不同,但组织复杂性与脊椎动物相关。构成被囊动物门大部分的海鞘是底栖固着的雌雄同体生物,通过游动的蝌蚪幼虫阶段进行有性繁殖。已知超过一半的海鞘物种能够通过出芽进行无性繁殖,通常会形成群体,其中被称为游动孢子的动物通过外部血管系统相互连接。此外,群体海鞘是包括异体识别、免疫生物学、衰老、血管生成和全身再生等重要生物学过程的成熟模型。然而,目前养殖基础设施的匮乏将这些动物的研究限制在沿海地区。为了促进群体海鞘在更广泛范围内的科学传播和普及,我们开发了一种灵活的循环养殖装置,用于它们在实验室中的长期培养。我们的系统既受到沿海海鞘实验室使用的流水水族箱的启发,也受到用于斑马鱼研究的实验室循环系统的启发。因此,我们的混合系统在一个半自动系统中结合了群体繁殖、水过滤和食物培养,标本在悬挂的显微镜载玻片上生长。温度、光/暗周期、流速和喂食速率可以在四个不同的养殖环境中独立控制,为特定物种的优化以及进行实验提供空间。这个装置还配备了一个隔离区,用于野生分离株的驯化。在此,我们展示了我们成功地在距离其自然栖息地600多公里的循环人工海水中养殖群体海鞘Botrylloides diegensis超过3年。我们表明,只要存在合适的海洋微生物群,群体就能很好地适应实验室培养,并且可以分离、繁殖特定菌株并长期有效地用于研究。我们系统灵活且模块化的结构可以扩大规模并适应特定物种(如Botryllus schlosseri)以及特定实验室空间的需求。总体而言,我们表明Botrylloides diegensis可以在内陆成功养殖,并建议我们的结果可以推广到其他群体海鞘物种,以促进对这些迷人动物的研究。