Article ID | Journal | Published Year | Pages | File Type |
---|---|---|---|---|
2088723 | Journal of Immunological Methods | 2010 | 12 Pages |
The mouse spinal cord is an important site for autoimmune and injury models. Skull thinning surgery provides a minimally invasive window for microscopy of the mouse cerebral cortex, but there are no parallel methods for the spinal cord. We introduce a novel, facile and inexpensive method for two-photon laser scanning microscopy of the intact spinal cord in the mouse by taking advantage of the naturally accessible intervertebral space. These are powerful methods when combined with gene-targeted mice in which endogenous immune cells are labeled with green fluorescent protein (GFP). We first demonstrate that generation of the intervertebral window does not elicit a reaction of GFP+ microglial cells in CX3CR1gfp/+ mice. We next demonstrate a distinct rostrocaudal migration of GFP+ immune cells in the spinal cord of CXCR6gfp/+ mice during active experimental autoimmune encephalomyelitis (EAE). Interestingly, infiltration of the cerebral cortex by GFP+ cells in these mice required three conditions: EAE induction, cortical injury and expression of CXCR6 on immune cells.