Hindlimb Skeletal Muscle Extraction: A Procedure to Excise Hindlimb Skeletal Muscles from Murine Model

Published: April 30, 2023

Abstract

Source: Bonetto, A. et al. The Colon-26 Carcinoma Tumor-bearing Mouse as a Model for the Study of Cancer Cachexia. J. Vis. Exp. (2016)

In this video, we describe the procedure to excise hindlimb skeletal muscles from a mouse model. The excised muscles can be stored at lower temperatures until further downstream analysis. 

Protocol

All procedures involving animal models have been reviewed by the local institutional animal care committee and the JoVE veterinary review board.

1. Tissue and Organ Excision

NOTE: For use of tissues in biochemical or molecular biology assays, plan to weigh each organ and tissue and place a fragment immediately into pre-labeled cryotubes. Snap freeze in liquid nitrogen and store at -80 °C.

  1. In order to avoid contamination of tissue samples with fur, spray 70% ethanol over the entire body.
  2. Place the mouse on a dissection bed in a supine position and extend a limb vertically by attaching the foot to an elevated buret clamp.
  3. Grasp the skin of the lower limb with Dumont forceps, and use the curved fine scissors to gently remove the skin and fascia, exposing the underlying muscle bellies of the lower limb.
  4. Identify the gastrocnemius muscle on the posterior lower limb by its origin at the lateral and medial condyles on the posterior femur and its insertion at the calcaneus via the calcaneal tendon.
    1. Proceed to cut the gastrocnemius calcaneal tendon. Grasp the distal end of the gastrocnemius with Dumont forceps and pull the muscle belly toward its origin. Using scissors, cut the muscle at the origin as close as possible to the femur. Place the muscle in a dish. Weigh it immediately and freeze it in a tube in liquid nitrogen.
      NOTE: Be sure not to excise the soleus muscle along with the gastrocnemius. If that occurs, carefully remove soleus by gently pulling it off with the forceps.
  5. Proceed to identify and excise the tibialis anterior muscle from its origin at the anterolateral surface of the tibia and its insertion at the medial cuneiform via its distal tendon.
    1. In order to have leverage, hold the foot by grasping the digits with the index finger and thumb. Insert the tip of Dumont forceps immediately under the superficial distal tendon of the tibialis and move the forceps such that the blunt side can be used to detach the tibialis muscle belly from the underlying connective tissue.
    2. Cut the distal tendon using the fine curved scissors and then cut the muscle at the origin as close as possible to the tibia.

Disclosures

The authors have nothing to disclose.

Materials

CD2F1 mice Harlan 60
Anesthesia apparatus EZ-Anesthesia EZ-7000
OCT Tissue-Tek 4583
Cryostat Leica CM1850
Cork disks Electron Microscopy Sciences 63305
Microtainer BD  365873
Superfrost plus glass slides VWR 48311-703
Streptomycin-Penicillin Cellgro 30-002-CI

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Cite This Article
Hindlimb Skeletal Muscle Extraction: A Procedure to Excise Hindlimb Skeletal Muscles from Murine Model. J. Vis. Exp. (Pending Publication), e20422, doi: (2023).

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