Spores are essential for the long-term survival of many diverse organisms, due to their roles in reproduction and stress resistance. In the environmental human fungal pathogen, Cryptococcus, basidiospores are robust cells with the ability to cause disease in animal models of infection.
(1) The microscope and stage-top incubator need to be preheated to minimize thermal drift during long-term experiments. At least 1 h before starting the experiment, fill the stage-top incubator with dH2O, place the heating ring on the desired objective (20×) and turn the heating element on to 30 °C.
(2) Prepare a 384-well plate (Thermo Fisher Scientific, Waltham, MA, USA, ref no. 142762) with spores, allow them to settle, then add 2× germination medium just prior to starting the assay as follows:
(3) Using the 20× objective (Nikon CFI Plan Apochromat Lambda 20XC), maneuver to the location of the first well. Make sure to enable the perfect focus (PFS) on the microscope. Spores are in focus when they are dark ovals without any halo-ed edges. Select X, Y, and Z coordinates for each position. Make sure that there is no overlap between images. Select three images per well for a total of nine images per sample.
(4) Once all image locations have been selected, inspect each image individually, and reset the Z coordinate so that each image is in focus, as thermal drift may occur while the experiment is being set up.
(5) Set up Z-stack imaging ranging from +7.5 μm to −7.5 μm from your selected Z-coordinates with imaging every 1.5 μm for a total of 21 images per position. Z-stacks ensure that in-focus images will be obtained across the time course of germination, regardless of any thermal drift. This step is essential because the PFS is not designed to focus on many small cells, as is done in this assay.
(6) Set the microscope to take images every 2 h for 16 h for a total of 9 timepoints. This is the standard imaging time frame for wild type spore germination in SD medium, although longer time courses and alternative intervals can be used as needed for individual experiments.
(7) Ensure that all desired parameters are set properly for the automated experiment (time loop, each XYZ positions, Z-stack, etc.) before starting the image acquisition. Initiate image acquisition.
(8) Once the image collection is completed, export the images to TIFF files.
(9) Select the image from the Z-stack that is most in-focus for each position and time point. Spores should be dark (black/gray) and free of halo-ed edges.
(10) Place images in corresponding folders with the following progression/experiment/sample/time (0H, 2H, etc.)/Input. Create an “output” and “data” folder under each time point before running ImageJ.
(11) Run each sample folder through the ImageJ program.
(12) This program quantifies the area and aspect ratio of each spot in the image and compiles them into a spreadsheet. Run each sample folder through the MATLAB program. This program determines how many spots fit “spore,” “yeast,” or “other” parameters based on size and aspect ratio. It outputs a 2D histogram with size on the X-axis and aspect ratio on the Y-axis for each time point. Population level changes can be tracked over time.
(13) This program also outputs a data.csv file, which can be used for further data manipulation (creating bar plots and rate curves).
This entry is adapted from the peer-reviewed paper 10.3390/jof8010004