From Brain Organoids to Animal Chimeras: Novel Platforms for Studying Human Brain Development and Disease
Abed Mansour, EMBO Fellow, The Salk Institute
Due to the immense complexity of the human brain, the study of its
development, function, and dysfunction during health and disease has
proven to be challenging. The advent of patient-derived human induced
pluripotent stem cells, and subsequently their self-organization into
three-dimensional brain organoids, which mimics the complexity of the
brain's architecture and function, offers an unprecedented opportunity
to model human brain development and disease in new ways. However, there
is still a pressing need to develop new technologies that recapitulate
the long-term developmental trajectories and the complex in vivo
cellular environment of the brain. To address this need, we have
developed a human brain organoid-based approach to generate a chimeric
human/animal brain system that facilitates long-term anatomical
integration, differentiation, and vascularization in vivo. We also
demonstrated the development of functional neuronal networks within the
brain organoid and synaptic-cross interaction between the organoid
axonal projections and the host brain. This approach set the stage for
investigating human brain development and mental disorders in vivo, and
run therapeutic studies under physiological conditions.
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