4.6 Review Book Chapter

3D Brain Organoids: Studying Brain Development and Disease Outside the Embryo

Journal

ANNUAL REVIEW OF NEUROSCIENCE, VOL 43
Volume 43, Issue -, Pages 375-389

Publisher

ANNUAL REVIEWS
DOI: 10.1146/annurev-neuro-070918-050154

Keywords

human brain; neurodevelopment; 3D organoids; single-cell biology; disease modeling

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Scientists have been fascinated by the human brain for centuries, yet knowledge of the cellular and molecular events that build the human brain during embryogenesis and of how abnormalities in this process lead to neurological disease remains very superficial. In particular, the lack of experimental models for a process that largely occurs during human in utero development, and is therefore poorly accessible for study, has hindered progress in mechanistic understanding. Advances in stem cell-derived models of human organogenesis, in the form of three-dimensional organoid cultures, and transformative new analytic technologies have opened new experimental pathways for investigation of aspects of development, evolution, and pathology of the human brain. Here, we consider the biology of brain organoids, compared and contrasted with the endogenous human brain, and highlight experimental strategies to use organoids to pioneer new understanding of human brain pathology.

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