Protocol

Obtaining Xenopus tropicalis Embryos by In Vitro Fertilization

  1. Mustafa K. Khokha1
  1. 1Pediatric Genomics Discovery Program, Department of Pediatrics and Genetics, Yale University School of Medicine, New Haven, Connecticut 06510, USA
  1. 2Correspondence: maura.lane{at}yale.edu

Abstract

Xenopus is a powerful model system for cell and developmental biology in part because frogs produce thousands of eggs and embryos year-round. In vitro fertilization (IVF) is ideal for obtaining developmentally synchronized embryos for microinjection or when natural mating has failed to produce a fertilization. In IVF, females are induced to ovulate, and then eggs are collected by manual expression. After testes are collected from a euthanized male frog, the eggs are fertilized in vitro. The embryos are then treated with cysteine to remove the sticky protective jelly coat. Dejellied embryos are much easier to manipulate during microinjection or when sorting in a Petri dish. The jelly coat is also very difficult to penetrate with an injection needle. After microinjection, embryos are maintained in Petri dishes until desired stages are reached. Although in vitro fertilization in X. laevis and X. tropicalis is similar, critical differences in solutions, handling of testis, response of fertilized eggs directly after introduction of sperm, and developmental timing are required for successful fertilization in X. tropicalis.

Footnotes

  • From the Xenopus collection, edited by Hazel L. Sive.

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