Biology:Cerebral organoid
A neural, cerebral, or brain organoid, describes an artificially grown, in vitro, tissue resembling the brain. Consensus agreement is to call these neural organoids. [1] Neural organoids are created by culturing pluripotent stem cells, which spontaneously develop into a three-dimensional culture that can be maintained for months.[2] The brain is an extremely complex system of heterogeneous tissues and consists of a diverse array of neurons. This complexity has made studying the brain and understanding how it works a difficult task in neuroscience, especially when it comes to neurodevelopmental and neurodegenerative diseases. The purpose of creating an in vitro neurological model is to study these diseases in a more simple and less variable space. This 3D model is free of many potential in vivo limitations. The varying physiology between human and other mammalian models limits the scope of study in neurological disorders. Neural organoids are synthesized tissues that contain several types of nerve cells and have anatomical features that recapitulate regions of the nervous system.[3] Cerebral organoids are most similar to layers of neurons called the cortex and choroid plexus. With the addition of guidance cues, other regionalized (meaning directed differentiation) neural organoids resemble structures similar to the retina, meninges, spinal cord and hippocampus.[2][4] Stem cells have the potential to grow into many different types of tissues, and their fate is dependent on many factors. Below is an image showing some of the chemical factors that can lead stem cells to differentiate into various neural tissues; a more in-depth table of generating specific organoid identity has been published since.[5] Similar techniques are used on stem cells used to grow cerebral organoids.[3]
Cerebral organoids are used in the research and development of Organoid Intelligence technologies.[6]
Model development
Using human pluripotent stem cells to create in vitro cerebral organoids allows researchers to summarize current developmental mechanisms for human neural tissue as well as study the roots of human neurological diseases. Cerebral organoids are an investigative tool used to understand how disease pathology works. These organoids can be used in experiments that current in vitro methods are too simple for, while also being more applicable to humans than rodent or other mammalian models might be. Historically, major breakthroughs in how the brain works have resulted from studying injury or disorder in human brain function, leading to an understanding of how regions of the brain work. An in vitro human brain model would allow for the next wave in an understanding of the human brain.[2][7]
Culturing methods
To make an organoid, an embryoid (tissue that has some embryonic features) grown from natural stem cells is used. Embryos have three layers: endoderm, mesoderm and ectoderm. Each turns into various body parts. The nervous system grows from the ectoderm (which also contributes dental enamel and the epidermis).[7] Ectodermal cells were placed into gel droplets and floated in a nutrient broth in a rotating bioreactor, which supported cell growth without forming by the container. After ten days the organoid developed neurons. After 30 days it displayed regions similar to parts of brains. Lacking a blood supply, cerebral organoids reach about 4 mm across and can last a year or more.[4] The general procedure can be broken down into 5 steps. First human pluripotent stem cells are cultured. They are then allowed to cultivate into an embryoid body. Next the cell culture is induced to form a neuroectoderm. The neuroectoderm is then grown in a matrigel droplet. The matrigel provides nutrients and the neuroectoderm starts to proliferate and grow. It is important to note that, while these cells are self organizing, replication of specific brain regions in cerebral organoid counterparts is achieved by the addition of extracellular signals to the organoid environment during different stages of development; these signals were found to create change in cell differentiation patterns, thus leading to recapitulation of the desired brain region.[5] Normally, SMAD inhibition is used in usual cerebral organoid culturing processes; recent studies show that inhibition of this process generates microglia in cerebral organoids.[8] It is important to note that the lack of vasculature limits the size the organoid can grow. This has been the major limitation in organoid development; recently, however, new methods using a spinning bioreactor have allowed an increase in the availability of nutrients to cells inside the organoid. This last step has been the key breakthrough in organoid development.[9] Spinning bioreactors have been used increasingly in cell culture and tissue growth applications. The reactor is able to deliver faster cell doubling times, increased cell expansion and increased extra-cellular matrix components when compared to statically cultured cells.[10]
This was the original method outlined by Madeline Lancaster[2] and has since been developed and refined. Newer methods allow development of cerebrovascular organoids,[11] and micro pumps to provide circulation through them are being developed, as explained in this video by Dr George M. Church.
Components
Differentiation
It has been shown that cerebral organoids grown using the spinning bioreactor 3D culture method differentiate into various neural tissue types, such as the optic cup, hippocampus, ventral parts of the teleencephelon and dorsal cortex.[12] Furthermore, it was shown that human brain organoids could intrinsically develop integrated light-sensitive optic cups.[13]
The neural stem/progenitor cells are unique because they are able to self-renew and are multipotent. This means they can generate neurons and glial cells which are the two main components of neural systems. The fate of these cells is controlled by several factors that affect the differentiation process. The spatial location and temporal attributes of neural progenitor cells can influence if the cells form neurons or glial cells. Further differentiation is then controlled by extracellular conditions and cell signaling.[14] The exact conditions and stimuli necessary to differentiate neural progenitor cells into specific neural tissues such as hippocampal tissue, optic nerve, cerebral cortex, etc. are unknown. It is believed that cerebral organoids can be used to study the developmental mechanisms of these processes.[9]
Gene expression
To test if the neural progenitor cells and stem cells are differentiating into specific neural tissues, several gene markers can be tested. Two markers that are present during pluripotent stages are OCT4 and NANOG. These two markers are diminished during the course of development for the organoid. Neural identity markers that note successful neural induction, SOX1 and PAX6, are upregulated during organoid development. These changes in expression support the case for self-guided differentiation of cerebral organoids.[2] Markers for forebrain and hindbrain can also be tested. Forebrain markers FOXG1 and SIX3 are highly expressed throughout organoid development. However, hindbrain markers EGR2 and ISL1 show early presence but a decrease in the later stages. This imbalance towards forebrain development is similar to the developmental expansion of forebrain tissue in human brain development.[2] To test if organoids develop even further into regional specification, gene markers for cerebral cortex and occipital lobe have been tested. Many regions that have forebrain marker FOXG1, labeling them as regions with cerebral cortical morphology, were also positive for marker EMX1 which indicates dorsal cortical identity. These specific regions can be even further specified by markers AUTS2, TSHZ2, and LMO4 with the first representing cerebral cortex and the two after representing the occipital lobe.[2] Genetic markers for the hippocampus, ventral forebrain, and choroid plexus are also present in cerebral organoids, however, the overall structures of these regions have not yet been formed.
Organization
Cerebral organoids also possess functional cerebral cortical neurons. These neurons must form on the radially organized cortical plate. The marker TBR1 is present in the preplate, the precursor to the cortical plate, and is present, along with MAP2, a neuronal marker, in 30-day-old cerebral organoids. These markers are indicative of a basal neural layer similar to a preplate. These cells are also apically adjacent to a neutral zone and are reelin+ positive, which indicates the presence of Cajal-Retzius cells. The Cajal-Retzius cells are important to the generation of cortical plate architecture.[9] The cortical plate is usually generated inside-out such that later-born neurons migrate to the top superficial layers. This organization is also present in cerebral organoids based on genetic marker testing. Neurons that are early born have marker CTIP2 and are located adjacent to the TBR1 exhibiting preplate cells. Late-born neurons with markers SATB2 and BRN2 are located in a superficial layer, further away from the preplate than the early born neurons suggesting cortical plate layer formation. Additionally, after 75 days of formation, cerebral organoids show a rudimentary marginal zone, a cell-poor region. The formation of layered cortical plate is very basic in cerebral organoids and suggests the organoid lacks the cues and factors to induce formation of layer II-VI organization.[2] The cerebral organoid neurons can, however, form axons as shown by GFP staining. GFP labeled axons have been shown to have complex branching and growth cone formation. Additionally, calcium dye imaging has shown cerebral organoids to have Ca2+ oscillations and spontaneous calcium surges in individual cells. The calcium signaling can be enhanced through glutamate and inhibited through tetrodotoxin.[2]
Interactions with environment
In DishBrain, grown human brain cells were integrated into digital systems to play a simulated Pong via electrophysiological stimulation and recording. The cells "showed significantly improved performance in Pong" when embodied in a virtual game-world.[15][16][17]
- Interactions with surrounding tissues
It is not fully understood how individual localized tissues formed by stem cells are able to coordinate with surrounding tissues to develop into a whole organ.[18] It has been shown however that most tissue differentiation requires interactions with surrounding tissues and depends on diffusible induction factors to either inhibit or encourage various differentiation and physical localization.[18] Cerebral organoid differentiation is somewhat localized. The previously mentioned markers for forebrain and hindbrain are physically localized, appearing in clusters. This suggests that local stimuli are released once one or more cells differentiate into a specific type as opposed to a random pathway throughout the tissue. The markers for subspecification of cortical lobes, prefrontal cortex and occipital lobe, are also physically localized. However, the hippocampus and ventral forebrain cells are not physically localized and are randomly located through the cerebral organoid.[2] Cerebral organoids lack blood vessels and are limited in size by nutrient uptake in the innermost cells. Spinning bioreactors and advanced 3D scaffolding techniques are able to increase organoid size, though the integration of in vitro nutrient delivery systems is likely to spark the next major leap in cerebral organoid development.[19]
Assays
Cerebral organoids have the potential to function as a model with which disease and gene expression might be studied.[20] However, diagnostic tools are needed to evaluate cerebral organoid tissue and create organoids modeling the disease or state of development in question.[21] Transcriptome analysis has been used as an assay to examine the pathology of cerebral organoids derived from individual patients.[22] Additionally, TUNEL assays have been used in studies as an evaluative marker of apoptosis in cerebral organoids.[23] Other assays used to analyze cerebral organoids include the following:
Genetic modifications
Cerebral organoids can be used to study gene expression via genetic modifications.[20] The degree to which these genetic modifications are present in the entire organoid depends on what stage of development the cerebral organoid is in when these genetic modifications are made; the earlier these modifications are made, such as when the cerebral organoid is in the single cell stage, the more likely these modifications will affect a greater portion of the cells in the cerebral organoid.[20] The degree to which these genetic modifications are present within the cerebral organoid also depends on the process by which these genetic modifications are made. If the genetic information is administered into one cerebral organoid cell's genome via machinery, then the genetic modification will remain present in cells resulting from replication.[20] Crispr/Cas 9 is a method by which this long-lasting genetic modification can be made.[20] A system involving use of transposons has also been suggested as a means to generate long-lasting genetic modifications; however, the extent to which transposons might interact with a cell genome might differs on a cell to cell basis, which would create variable expressivity between cerebral organoid cells.[20] If, however, the genetic modification is made via “genetic cargo” insertion (such as through Adeno-associated virus/ electroporation methods) then it has been found that the genetic modification becomes less present with each round of cell division in cerebral organoids.[20]
Computational methods
Use of computational methods have been called for as a means to help improve the cerebral organoid cultivation process; development of computational methods has also been called for in order to provide necessary detailed renderings of different components of the cerebral organoid (such as cell connectivity) that current methods are unable to provide.[21] Programming designed to model detailed cerebral organoid morphology does not yet exist.[21]
Applications
There are many potential applications for cerebral organoid use, such as cell fate potential, cell replacement therapy, and cell-type specific genome assays.[19] Cerebral organoids also provide a unique insight into the timing of development of neural tissues and can be used as a tool to study the differences across species.[19] Further potential applications for cerebral organoids include:[19]
Tissue morphogenesis
Tissue morphogenesis with respect to cerebral organoids covers how neural organs form in vertebrates. Cerebral organoids can serve as in vitro tools to study the formation, modulate it, and further understand the mechanisms controlling it.[19] The course of tissue morphogenesis is complicated and includes the improvement of a tissue's three-layered design and association. This cycle is accomplished through a progression of sub-atomic and cell occasions that lead to the making of organs and tissues with explicit capabilities. On account of cerebral organoids, tissue morphogenesis is the method involved with shaping and coordinating brain tissues that impersonate the improvement of the cerebrum. Cerebral organoids are three-layered societies of brain cells that are made utilizing pluripotent immature microorganisms like undeveloped undifferentiated organisms or prompted pluripotent undeveloped cells. These organoids are intended to mirror parts of mental health, making them an important device for concentrating on the development of brain tissues in a controlled in vitro climate. Instead of being studied in vivo (within a living organism), cerebral organoids are used as in vitro models, which means that they are studied outside the organism (in a laboratory setting). This permits analysts to control and control exploratory circumstances more rapidly than in living organic entities. Various species, including humans, rodents, and primates, can produce cerebral organoids that can be used to study various aspects of brain development. Cerebral organoids give a stage to notice and examine the course of brain tissue development. Specialists can screen the improvement of various cell types, notice the foundation of tissue layers, and study the unpredictable cell and atomic occasions engaged with organoid morphogenesis. This incorporates recognizing the phone types that make up the organoid, following their movement and separation, and describing the atomic signs controlling their way of behaving. With cerebral organoids, researchers can tentatively adjust different variables to impact or control tissue morphogenesis.
Migration assays
Cerebral organoids can help to study cell migration. Neural glial cells cover a wide variety of neural cells, some of which move around the neurons. The factors that govern their movements, as well as neurons in general, can be studied using cerebral organoids.[7]
Clonal lineage tracing
Clonal lineage tracing is part of fate mapping, where the lineage of differentiated tissues is traced to the pluripotent progenitors. The local stimuli released and mechanism of differentiation can be studied using cerebral organoids as a model.[19] Genetic modifications in cerebral organoids could serve as a means to accomplish lineage tracing.[20]
Transplantation
Cerebral organoids can be used to grow specific brain regions and transplant them into regions of neurodegeneration as a therapeutic treatment.[24][25] They can fuse with host vasculature and be immunologically silent.[26] In some cases, the genomes of these cerebral organoids would first have to be edited.[22] Recent studies have been able to achieve successful transplantation and integration of cerebral organoids into mouse brains; development of cell differentiation and vascularity was also observed after transplantation.[27] Cerebral organoids might serve as the basis for transplantation and rebuilding in the human brain due to the similarity in structure.[27]
Drug testing
Cerebral organoids can be used as simple models of complex brain tissues to study the effects of drugs and to screen them for initial safety and efficacy. Testing new drugs for neurological diseases could also result from this method of applying drug high-throughput screening methods to cerebral organoids.[22]
Developmental biology
Organoids can be used for the study of brain development, for example identifying and investigating genetic switches that have a significant impact on it.[28][29][30] This can be used for the prevention and treatment of specific diseases[31] (see below) but also for other purposes such as insights into the genetic factors of recent brain evolution (or the origin of humans and evolved difference to other apes),[32][33][34] human enhancement and improving intelligence, identifying detrimental exposome impacts (and protection thereof), or improving brain healthspans.
Disease study
Organoids can be used to study the crucial early stages of brain development, test drugs and, because they can be made from living cells, study individual patients.[4] Additionally, the development of vascularized cerebral organoids could be used for investigating stroke therapy in the future.[35]
Zika Virus
Zika virus has been shown to have teratogenic effects, causing defects in fetal neurological development. Cerebral organoids have been used in studies in order to understand the process by which Zika virus affects the fetal brain and, in some cases, causes microcephaly.[22][23] Cerebral organoids infected with the Zika virus have been found to be smaller in size than their uninfected counterparts, which is reflective of fetal microcephaly.[22][23] Increased apoptosis was also found in cerebral organoids infected with Zika virus.[36] Another study found that neural progenitor cell (NPC) populations were greatly reduced in these samples. The two methods by which NPC populations were reduced were increased cell death and reduced cell proliferation. TLR3 receptor upregulation was identified in these infected organoids. Inhibition of this TLR3 receptor was shown to partially halt some of the Zika induced effects.[37] Additionally, lumen size was found to be increased in organoids infected with Zika virus.[22][23] The results found from studying cerebral organoids infected with Zika virus at different stages of maturation suggest that early exposure in developing fetuses can cause greater likelihood of Zika virus-associated neurological birth defects.[23]
Cocaine
Cocaine has also been shown to have teratogenic effects on fetal development. Cerebral organoids have been used to study which enzyme isoforms are necessary for fetal neurological defects caused by cocaine use during pregnancy.[22] One of these enzymes was determined to be cytochrome P450 isoform CYP3A5.[22]
Microcephaly
In one case, a cerebral organoid grown from a patient with microcephaly demonstrated related symptoms and revealed that apparently, the cause is overly rapid development, followed by slower brain growth. Microencephaly is a developmental condition in which the brain remains undersized, producing an undersized head and debilitation. Microcephaly is not suitable for mouse models, which do not replicate the condition.[4] The primary form of the disease is thought to be caused by a homozygous mutation in the microcephalin gene. The disease is difficult to reproduce in mouse models because mice lack the developmental stages for an enlarged cerebral cortex that humans have. Naturally, a disease which affects this development would be impossible to show in a model which does not have it to begin with.[38] To use cerebral organoids to model a human's microcephaly, one group of researchers has taken patient skin fibroblasts and reprogrammed them using four well known reprogramming factors. These include OCT4, SOX2, MYC and KLF4. The reprogrammed sample was able to be cloned into induced pluripotent stem cells. The cells were cultured into a cerebral organoid following a process described in the cerebral organoid creation section below. The organoid that resulted had decreased numbers of neural progenitor cells and smaller tissues. Additionally, the patient-derived tissues displayed fewer and less frequent neuroepithelial tissues made of progenitors, decreased radial glial stem cells, and increased neurons. These results suggest that the underlying mechanism of microcephaly is caused by cells prematurely differentiating into neurons leaving a deficit of radial glial cells.[2]
Alzheimer's disease
Alzheimer's disease pathology has also been modeled with cerebral organoids.[39] Affected individual's pluripotent stem cells were used to generate brain organoids and then compared to control models, synthesised from healthy individuals. It was found that in the affected models, structures similar to that of plaques caused by amyloid beta proteins and neurofibrillary tangles, that cause the disease's symptoms were observed.[40] Previous attempts to model this so accurately have been unsuccessful, with drugs being developed on the basis of efficacy in pre-clinical murine models demonstrating no effect in human trials.[41]
Autism spectrum diseases
Cerebral organoids can also be used to study autism spectrum disorders.[42] In one study, cerebral organoids were cultured from cells derived from macrocephaly ASD patients.[42] These cerebral organoids were found to reflect characteristics typical of the ASD-related macrocephaly phenotype found in the patients.[42] By cultivating cerebral organoids from ASD patients with macrocephaly, connections could be made between certain gene mutations and phenotypic expression.[42] Autism has also been studied through the comparison of healthy versus affected synthesised brain organoids.[43] Observation of the two models showed the overexpression of a transcription factor FOXG1 that produced a larger amount of GABAergic inhibitory neurons in the affected models. The significance of this use of brain organoids is that it has added great support for the excitatory/inhibitory imbalance hypothesis[44] which if proven true could help identify targets for drugs so that the condition could be treated.
The field of epigenetics and how DNA methylation might influence development of ASD has also been of interest in recent years. The traditional method of studying post-mortem neural samples from individuals with ASD poses many challenges, so cerebral organoids have been proposed as an alternate method of studying the potential effect that epigenetic mechanisms may have on the development of autism. This use of the cerebral organoid model to examine ASD and epigenetic patterns might provide insight in regards to epigenetic developmental timelines. However, it is important to note that the conditions in which cerebral organoids are cultured in might affect gene expression, and consequentially affect observations made using this model. Additionally, there is concern over the variability in cerebral organoids cultured from the same sample.[45] Further research into the extent and accuracy by which cerebral organoids recapitulate epigenetic patterns found in primary samples is also needed.[45]
Preterm hypoxia/ischemia
Preterm hypoxic injury remain difficult to study because of limited availability of human fetal brain tissues and inadequate animal models to study human corticogenesis. Cerebral organoid can be used to model prenatal pathophysiology and to compare the susceptibility of the different neural cell types to hypoxia during corticogenesis. Intermediate progenitors seems to be particularly affected, due to the unfolded protein response pathway.[46] It has also been observed that hypoxia resulted in apoptosis in cerebral organoids, with outer radial glia and neuroblasts/immature neurons being particularly affected.[47]
Glioblastomas
Traditional means of studying glioblastomas come with limitations. One example of such limitations would be the limited sample availability. Because of these challenges that come with using a more traditional approach, cerebral organoids have been used as an alternative means to model the development of brain cancer. In one study, cerebral organoids were simulated to reflect tumor-like qualities using CRISPR CAS-9. Increased cell division was observed in these genetically altered models. Cerebral organoids were also used in mice models to study tumorigenesis and invasiveness. At the same time, the growth of brain cancers is influenced by environmental factors which are not yet replicable in cerebral organoid models. Cerebral organoids have been shown to provide insight into dysregulation of genes responsible for tumor development.[36]
Multiple Sclerosis
Multiple sclerosis is an auto-immune inflammatory disorder affecting the central nervous system. Environmental and genetic factors contribute to the development of multiple sclerosis, however, the etiology of this condition is unknown. Induced pluripotent stem cells from healthy human controls, as well as from patients with multiple sclerosis were grown into cerebral organoids creating an innovative human model of this disease.[48]
Limitations
Cerebral organoids are preferred over their 3D cell culture counterparts because they can better reflect the structure of the human brain, and because, to a certain extent, they can reflect fetal neocortex development over an extended period of time. While cerebral organoids have a lot of potential, their culturing and development comes with limitations and areas for improvement.[36] For example, it takes several months to create one cerebral organoid, and the methods used to analyze them are also time consuming.[27] Additionally, cerebral organoids do not have structures typical of a human brain, such as a blood brain barrier.[36] This limits the types of diseases that can be studied. Other limitations include:
Necrotic centers
Until recently, the central part of organoids have been found to be necrotic due to oxygen as well as nutrients being unable to reach that innermost area.[35][21] This imposes limitations to cerebral organoids' physiological applicability.[21] Because of this lack of oxygen and nutrients, neural progenitor cells are limited in their growth.[49] However, recent findings suggest that, in the process of culturing a cerebral organoid, a necrotic center could be avoided by using fluidic devices to increase the organoid's exposure to media.[21]
Reliability in generation
The structure of cerebral organoids across different cultures has been found to be variable; a standardization procedure to ensure uniformity has yet to become common practice.[35] Future steps in revising cerebral organoid production would include creating methods to ensure standardization of cerebral organoid generation.[35] One such step proposed involves regulating the composition and thickness of the gel in which cerebral organoids are cultured in; this might contribute to greater reliability in cerebral organoid production.[21] Additionally, variability in generation of cerebral organoids is introduced due to differences in stem cells used.[22] These differences can arise from different manufacturing methods or host differences.[22] Increased metabolic stress has also been found within organoids. This metabolic stress has been found to restrict organoid specificity.[8] Future steps to streamline organoid culturing include analyzing more than one sample at a time.[27]
Maturity
At the moment, the development of mature synapses in cerebral organoids is limited because of the media used.[35] Additionally, while some electrophysiological properties have been shown to develop in cerebral organoids, cultivation of separate and distinct organoid regions has been shown to limit the maturation of these electrophysiological properties. Modeling of electrophysiological neurodevelopmental processes typical of development later in the neurodevelopmental timeline, such as synaptogenesis, is not yet suggested in cerebral organoid models.[8] Since cerebral organoids are reflective of what happens during fetal neurodevelopment, there has been concern over how late onset diseases manifest in them. Future improvements include developing a way to recapitulate neurodegenerative diseases in cerebral organoids.[27]
'Future Directions
Moving forward, the cerebral organoid research field should prioritize the refinement of protocols aimed at enhancing the complexity, maturity, and ethical standards of these structures. This will require collaboration between diverse groups of experts, including neuroscientists, bioengineers, and ethicists, to ensure a holistic approach to advancing cerebral organoid research.
Ethics
In light of the rapid advancements in cerebral organoid research, it is imperative that we approach this field with great care and consideration. Upholding ethical principles and adhering to standards is crucial, and we must not disregard concerns surrounding the potential for consciousness, use of human-derived cells, and implications for personalized medicine. A comprehensive and meticulous evaluation is necessary to ensure transparent, accountable, and responsible research practices.
Sentient organoids
Ethical concerns have been raised with using cerebral organoids as a model for disease due to the potential of them experiencing sensations such as pain or having the ability to develop a consciousness.[50] Currently it is unlikely given the simplicity of synthesised models compared to the complexity of a human brain, however models have been shown to respond to light-based stimulation,[51] so present models do have some scope of responding to some stimuli at present. If such sensations could be proven to be present in any of the models, then the ethics of their use would be questionable.
Guidelines and legislation
Steps are being taken towards resolving the grey area such as a 2018 symposium at Oxford University where experts in the field, philosophers and lawyers met to try to clear up the ethical concerns with the new technology.[52] Similarly, projects such as Brainstorm from Case Western University aim to observe the progress of the field by monitoring labs working with brain organoids to try to begin the ‘building of a philosophical framework’ that future guidelines and legislation could be built upon.[53]
Humanized animals
Additionally, the "humanization" of animal models has been raised as a topic of concern in transplantation of human SC derived organoids into other animal models.[49] For example, potential future concerns of this type were described when human brain tissue organoids were transplanted into baby rats, appearing to be highly functional, to mature and to integrate with the rat brain. Such models can be used to model human brain development and, as demonstrated, to investigate diseases (and their potential therapies) but could be controversial.[54][55][56]
See also
References
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- ↑ 7.0 7.1 7.2 Neuroscience. (4th ed.). New York: W. H. Freeman. 2007. ISBN 978-0-87893-697-7.
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- ↑ "Reduced proliferation and excess astrogenesis of Pax6 heterozygous neural stem/progenitor cells". Neuroscience Research 74 (2): 116–21. October 2012. doi:10.1016/j.neures.2012.08.004. PMID 22944581.
- ↑ Yirka, Bob. "A mass of human brain cells in a petri dish has been taught to play Pong" (in en). medicalxpress.com. https://medicalxpress.com/news/2021-12-mass-human-brain-cells-petri.html.
- ↑ "Human brain cells in a dish learn to play Pong faster than an AI". New Scientist. https://www.newscientist.com/article/2301500-human-brain-cells-in-a-dish-learn-to-play-pong-faster-than-an-ai.
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- ↑ 21.0 21.1 21.2 21.3 21.4 21.5 21.6 "Experimental and Computational Methods for the Study of Cerebral Organoids: A Review" (in English). Frontiers in Neuroscience 13: 162. 2019. doi:10.3389/fnins.2019.00162. PMID 30890910.
- ↑ 22.0 22.1 22.2 22.3 22.4 22.5 22.6 22.7 22.8 22.9 "3D brain Organoids derived from pluripotent stem cells: promising experimental models for brain development and neurodegenerative disorders". Journal of Biomedical Science 24 (1): 59. August 2017. doi:10.1186/s12929-017-0362-8. PMID 28822354.
- ↑ 23.0 23.1 23.2 23.3 23.4 "Can We Better Understand How Zika Leads to Microcephaly? A Systematic Review of the Effects of the Zika Virus on Human Brain Organoids". The Journal of Infectious Diseases 219 (5): 734–745. February 2019. doi:10.1093/infdis/jiy572. PMID 30256965.
- ↑ "An in vivo model of functional and vascularized human brain organoids". Nature Biotechnology 36 (5): 432–441. June 2018. doi:10.1038/nbt.4127. PMID 29658944.
- ↑ "Vascularization and Engraftment of Transplanted Human Cerebral Organoids in Mouse Cortex". eNeuro 5 (6): ENEURO.0219–18.2018. November 2018. doi:10.1523/ENEURO.0219-18.2018. PMID 30460331.
- ↑ "Neuroectodermal Cell Culture: Endocrine Cells". Methods of tissue engineering (1st ed.). San Diego, CA: Academic Press. 2002. p. 381. ISBN 978-0-12-436636-7.
- ↑ 27.0 27.1 27.2 27.3 27.4 "Applications of Human Brain Organoids to Clinical Problems". Developmental Dynamics 248 (1): 53–64. January 2019. doi:10.1002/dvdy.24662. PMID 30091290.
- ↑ Fleck, Jonas Simon; Jansen, Sophie Martina Johanna; Wollny, Damian; Zenk, Fides; Seimiya, Makiko; Jain, Akanksha; Okamoto, Ryoko; Santel, Malgorzata et al. (5 October 2022). "Inferring and perturbing cell fate regulomes in human brain organoids" (in en). Nature 621 (7978): 365–372. doi:10.1038/s41586-022-05279-8. ISSN 1476-4687. PMID 36198796.
- University press release: Rüegg, Peter. "Mapping human brain development" (in en). E. T. H. Zürich via medicalxpress.com. https://medicalxpress.com/news/2022-10-human-brain.html.
- ↑ Kelley, Kevin W.; Pașca, Sergiu P. (6 January 2022). "Human brain organogenesis: Toward a cellular understanding of development and disease" (in English). Cell 185 (1): 42–61. doi:10.1016/j.cell.2021.10.003. ISSN 0092-8674. PMID 34774127.
- ↑ Chiaradia, Ilaria; Lancaster, Madeline A. (December 2020). "Brain organoids for the study of human neurobiology at the interface of in vitro and in vivo". Nature Neuroscience 23 (12): 1496–1508. doi:10.1038/s41593-020-00730-3. PMID 33139941.
- ↑ Qian, Xuyu; Song, Hongjun; Ming, Guo-li (15 April 2019). "Brain organoids: advances, applications and challenges". Development 146 (8): dev166074. doi:10.1242/dev.166074. PMID 30992274.
- ↑ Mostajo-Radji, Mohammed A.; Schmitz, Matthew T.; Montoya, Sebastian Torres; Pollen, Alex A. (February 2020). "Reverse engineering human brain evolution using organoid models". Brain Research 1729: 146582. doi:10.1016/j.brainres.2019.146582. PMID 31809699.
- ↑ Fernandes, Sarah; Klein, Davis; Marchetto, Maria C. (7 October 2021). "Unraveling Human Brain Development and Evolution Using Organoid Models". Frontiers in Cell and Developmental Biology 9: 737429. doi:10.3389/fcell.2021.737429. PMID 34692694.
- ↑ Muotri, Alysson R. (30 May 2019). "Brain organoids and insights on human evolution". F1000Research 8: 760. doi:10.12688/f1000research.18495.1. PMID 31275562.
- ↑ 35.0 35.1 35.2 35.3 35.4 "Dishing out mini-brains: Current progress and future prospects in brain organoid research". Developmental Biology 420 (2): 199–209. December 2016. doi:10.1016/j.ydbio.2016.06.037. PMID 27402594.
- ↑ 36.0 36.1 36.2 36.3 Amin, Neal D.; Paşca, Sergiu P. (October 2018). "Building Models of Brain Disorders with Three-Dimensional Organoids". Neuron 100 (2): 389–405. doi:10.1016/j.neuron.2018.10.007. ISSN 0896-6273. PMID 30359604.
- ↑ Qian, Xuyu; Nguyen, Ha Nam; Jacob, Fadi; Song, Hongjun; Ming, Guo-li (2017-03-15). "Using brain organoids to understand Zika virus-induced microcephaly" (in en). Development 144 (6): 952–957. doi:10.1242/dev.140707. ISSN 0950-1991. PMID 28292840.
- ↑ "Microcephaly: general considerations and aids to nosology". Journal of Craniofacial Genetics and Developmental Biology 10 (2): 175–204. 1990. PMID 2211965.
- ↑ "Modeling amyloid beta and tau pathology in human cerebral organoids". Molecular Psychiatry 23 (12): 2363–2374. December 2018. doi:10.1038/s41380-018-0229-8. PMID 30171212.
- ↑ "Pathogenesis of Alzheimer's disease". Clinical Interventions in Aging 2 (3): 347–59. September 2007. PMID 18044185.
- ↑ "Animal models of Alzheimer's disease and drug development". Drug Discovery Today: Technologies 10 (3): e319-27. September 2013. doi:10.1016/j.ddtec.2012.04.001. PMID 24050129.
- ↑ 42.0 42.1 42.2 42.3 Rossetti, A. C.; Koch, P.; Ladewig, J. (2019). "Drug discovery in psychopharmacology: from 2D models to cerebral organoids" (in en-US). Dialogues in Clinical Neuroscience 21 (2): 203–224. doi:10.31887/dcns.2019.21.2/jladewig. PMID 31636494. PMC 6787544. https://www.dialogues-cns.org/21-2/dialoguesclinneurosci-21-203/. Retrieved 2020-10-04.
- ↑ "Modeling Neurological Diseases With Human Brain Organoids". Frontiers in Synaptic Neuroscience 10: 15. 2018-06-08. doi:10.3389/fnsyn.2018.00015. PMID 29937727.
- ↑ "Three hypotheses for developmental defects that may underlie some forms of autism spectrum disorder". Current Opinion in Neurology 23 (2): 118–23. April 2010. doi:10.1097/WCO.0b013e328336eb13. PMID 20087182.
- ↑ 45.0 45.1 "Epigenetics and cerebral organoids: promising directions in autism spectrum disorders". Translational Psychiatry 8 (1): 14. January 2018. doi:10.1038/s41398-017-0062-x. PMID 29317608.
- ↑ "Human 3D cellular model of hypoxic brain injury of prematurity". Nature Medicine 25 (5): 784–791. May 2019. doi:10.1038/s41591-019-0436-0. PMID 31061540.
- ↑ "Distinct Vulnerability and Resilience of Human Neuroprogenitor Subtypes in Cerebral Organoid Model of Prenatal Hypoxic Injury" (in English). Frontiers in Cellular Neuroscience 13: 336. 2019. doi:10.3389/fncel.2019.00336. PMID 31417360.
- ↑ Daviaud, Nicolas; Chen, Eric; Edwards, Tara; Sadiq, Saud A. (15 March 2023). "Cerebral organoids in primary progressive multiple sclerosis reveal stem cell and oligodendrocyte differentiation defect". Biology Open 12 (3): bio059845. doi:10.1242/bio.059845. PMID 36744877.
- ↑ 49.0 49.1 "Transplantation of Human Brain Organoids: Revisiting the Science and Ethics of Brain Chimeras". Cell Stem Cell 25 (4): 462–472. October 2019. doi:10.1016/j.stem.2019.09.002. PMID 31585092.
- ↑ "Cerebral organoids: ethical issues and consciousness assessment". Journal of Medical Ethics 44 (9): 606–610. September 2018. doi:10.1136/medethics-2017-104555. PMID 29491041.
- ↑ "Cell diversity and network dynamics in photosensitive human brain organoids". Nature 545 (7652): 48–53. May 2017. doi:10.1038/nature22047. PMID 28445462. Bibcode: 2017Natur.545...48Q.
- ↑ "Human Brain Organoids: the Science, the Ethics". June 2018. https://www.neuroethicssociety.org/oxford-meeting-2018.
- ↑ Gogol, Ansley (October 2018). "A human brain model in a petri dish?". https://www.eurekalert.org/pub_releases/2018-10/cwru-ahb101618.php.
- ↑ "Human brain cells transplanted into baby rats' brains grow and form connections" (in en). MIT Technology Review. https://www.technologyreview.com/2022/10/12/1061204/human-brain-cells-transplanted-baby-rats-brains/.
- ↑ "Human neurons transplanted into rats to help study brain disorders" (in en). The Guardian. 12 October 2022. https://www.theguardian.com/science/2022/oct/12/human-neurons-transplanted-into-rats-to-help-study-brain-disorders.
- ↑ Revah, Omer; Gore, Felicity; Kelley, Kevin W.; Andersen, Jimena; Sakai, Noriaki; Chen, Xiaoyu; Li, Min-Yin; Birey, Fikri et al. (October 2022). "Maturation and circuit integration of transplanted human cortical organoids" (in en). Nature 610 (7931): 319–326. doi:10.1038/s41586-022-05277-w. ISSN 1476-4687. PMID 36224417. Bibcode: 2022Natur.610..319R.
Original source: https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Cerebral organoid.
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