Brain organoids: an ensemble of bioassays to investigate human neurodevelopment and disease

被引:113
作者
Sidhaye, Jaydeep [1 ]
Knoblich, Juergen A. [1 ]
机构
[1] Austrian Acad Sci IMBA, Vienna BioCtr VBC, Inst Mol Biotechnol, Dr Bohr Gasse 3, A-1030 Vienna, Austria
基金
欧洲研究理事会; 奥地利科学基金会;
关键词
PLURIPOTENT STEM-CELLS; HUMAN CEREBRAL ORGANOIDS; HUMAN-SPECIFIC FEATURES; SELF-ORGANIZATION; NEURAL PROGENITORS; CORTICAL DEVELOPMENT; EVOLUTIONARY CHANGES; PREFRONTAL CORTEX; IN-VITRO; HUMAN ES;
D O I
10.1038/s41418-020-0566-4
中图分类号
Q5 [生物化学]; Q7 [分子生物学];
学科分类号
071010 ; 081704 ;
摘要
Understanding etiology of human neurological and psychiatric diseases is challenging. Genomic changes, protracted development, and histological features unique to human brain development limit the disease aspects that can be investigated using model organisms. Hence, in order to study phenotypes associated with human brain development, function, and disease, it is necessary to use alternative experimental systems that are accessible, ethically justified, and replicate human context. Human pluripotent stem cell (hPSC)-derived brain organoids offer such a system, which recapitulates features of early human neurodevelopment in vitro, including the generation, proliferation, and differentiation of neural progenitors into neurons and glial cells and the complex interactions among the diverse, emergent cell types of the developing brain in three-dimensions (3-D). In recent years, numerous brain organoid protocols and related techniques have been developed to recapitulate aspects of embryonic and fetal brain development in a reproducible and predictable manner. Altogether, these different organoid technologies provide distinct bioassays to unravel novel, disease-associated phenotypes and mechanisms. In this review, we summarize how the diverse brain organoid methods can be utilized to enhance our understanding of brain disorders. Facts Brain organoids offer an in vitro approach to study aspects of human brain development and disease. Diverse brain organoid techniques offer bioassays to investigate new phenotypes associated with human brain disorders that are difficult to study in monolayer cultures. Brain organoids have been particularly useful to study phenomena and diseases associated with neural progenitor morphology, survival, proliferation, and differentiation. Open question Future brain organoid research needs to aim at later stages of neurodevelopment, linked with neuronal activity and connections, to unravel further disease-associated phenotypes. Continued improvement of existing organoid protocols is required to generate standardized methods that recapitulate in vivo-like spatial diversity and complexity.
引用
收藏
页码:52 / 67
页数:16
相关论文
共 141 条
[1]   iPSC-Derived Human Microglia-like Cells to Study Neurological Diseases [J].
Abud, Edsel M. ;
Ramirez, Ricardo N. ;
Martinez, Eric S. ;
Healy, Luke M. ;
Nguyen, Cecilia H. H. ;
Newman, Sean A. ;
Yeromin, Andriy V. ;
Scarfone, Vanessa M. ;
Marsh, Samuel E. ;
Fimbres, Cristhian ;
Caraway, Chad A. ;
Fote, Gianna M. ;
Madany, Abdullah M. ;
Agrawal, Anshu ;
Kayed, Rakez ;
Gylys, Karen H. ;
Cahalan, Michael D. ;
Cummings, Brian J. ;
Antel, Jack P. ;
Mortazavi, Ali ;
Carson, Monica J. ;
Poon, Wayne W. ;
Blurton-Jones, Mathew .
NEURON, 2017, 94 (02) :278-+
[2]   Human Mutations in NDE1 Cause Extreme Microcephaly with Lissencephaly [J].
Alkuraya, Fowzan S. ;
Cai, Xuyu ;
Emery, Carina ;
Mochida, Ganeshwaran H. ;
Al-Dosari, Mohammed S. ;
Felie, Jillian M. ;
Hill, R. Sean ;
Barry, Brenda J. ;
Partlow, Jennifer N. ;
Gascon, Generoso G. ;
Kentab, Amal ;
Jan, Mohammad ;
Shaheen, Ranad ;
Feng, Yuanyi ;
Walsh, Christopher A. .
AMERICAN JOURNAL OF HUMAN GENETICS, 2011, 88 (05) :536-547
[3]   Cerebral organoids derived from Sandhoff disease-induced pluripotent stem cells exhibit impaired neurodifferentiation [J].
Allende, Maria L. ;
Cook, Emily K. ;
Larman, Bridget C. ;
Nugent, Adrienne ;
Brady, Jacqueline M. ;
Golebiowski, Diane ;
Sena-Esteves, Miguel ;
Tifft, Cynthia J. ;
Proia, Richard L. .
JOURNAL OF LIPID RESEARCH, 2018, 59 (03) :550-563
[4]   Endoplasmic reticulum stress signalling - from basic mechanisms to clinical applications [J].
Almanza, Aitor ;
Carlesso, Antonio ;
Chintha, Chetan ;
Creedican, Stuart ;
Doultsinos, Dimitrios ;
Leuzzi, Brian ;
Luis, Andreia ;
McCarthy, Nicole ;
Montibeller, Luigi ;
More, Sanket ;
Papaioannou, Alexandra ;
Pueschel, Franziska ;
Sassano, Maria Livia ;
Skoko, Josip ;
Agostinis, Patrizia ;
de Belleroche, Jackie ;
Eriksson, Leif A. ;
Fulda, Simone ;
Gorman, Adrienne M. ;
Healy, Sandra ;
Kozlov, Andrey ;
Munoz-Pinedo, Cristina ;
Rehm, Markus ;
Chevet, Eric ;
Samali, Afshin .
FEBS JOURNAL, 2019, 286 (02) :241-278
[5]   Building Models of Brain Disorders with Three-Dimensional Organoids [J].
Amin, Neal D. ;
Pasca, Sergiu P. .
NEURON, 2018, 100 (02) :389-405
[6]   Transcriptome and epigenome landscape of human cortical development modeled in organoids [J].
Amiri, Anahita ;
Coppola, Gianfilippo ;
Scuderi, Soraya ;
Wu, Feinan ;
Roychowdhury, Tanmoy ;
Liu, Fuchen ;
Pochareddy, Sirisha ;
Shin, Yurae ;
Safi, Alexias ;
Song, Lingyun ;
Zhu, Ying ;
Sousa, Andre M. M. ;
Gerstein, Mark ;
Crawford, Gregory E. ;
Sestan, Nenad ;
Abyzov, Alexej ;
Vaccarino, Flora M. .
SCIENCE, 2018, 362 (6420) :1268-+
[7]   Down syndrome and the complexity of genome dosage imbalance [J].
Antonarakis, Stylianos E. .
NATURE REVIEWS GENETICS, 2017, 18 (03) :147-163
[8]   Pluripotent stem cells in disease modelling and drug discovery [J].
Avior, Yishai ;
Sagi, Ido ;
Benvenisty, Nissim .
NATURE REVIEWS MOLECULAR CELL BIOLOGY, 2016, 17 (03) :170-182
[9]   Fused cerebral organoids model interactions between brain regions [J].
Bagley, Joshua A. ;
Reumann, Daniel ;
Bian, Shan ;
Levi-Strauss, Julie ;
Knoblich, Juergen A. .
NATURE METHODS, 2017, 14 (07) :743-+
[10]   SnapShot: Microglia in Disease [J].
Beggs, Simon ;
Salter, Michael W. .
CELL, 2016, 165 (05) :1294-+