4.7 Article

Benchmarking brain organoid recapitulation of fetal corticogenesis

Journal

TRANSLATIONAL PSYCHIATRY
Volume 12, Issue 1, Pages -

Publisher

SPRINGERNATURE
DOI: 10.1038/s41398-022-02279-0

Keywords

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Funding

  1. Telethon Italy [GTB12001]
  2. European Research Council (ERC) [616441]
  3. European Union [825759]
  4. Fondazione Cariplo [2017-0886]
  5. Fondazione Telethon [GEP13105, GGP19295]
  6. British Columbia Children's Hospital Research Institute
  7. Science Without Borders Program (CAPES, Governo Dilma Rousseff, Brazil)
  8. European Research Council (ERC) [616441] Funding Source: European Research Council (ERC)

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Brain organoids are important for understanding the molecular mechanisms of psychiatric and neurological conditions. In this study, the gene expression patterns of brain organoids from different protocols were compared to those of fetal cortex. The relevance of identified gene modules for neurodevelopmental disorders and psychiatric conditions was evaluated. The study also revealed a two-step differentiation process of brain organoids. The findings provide valuable insights into the modeling of human corticogenesis and its impact on neuropsychiatric outcomes.
Brain organoids are becoming increasingly relevant to dissect the molecular mechanisms underlying psychiatric and neurological conditions. The in vitro recapitulation of key features of human brain development affords the unique opportunity of investigating the developmental antecedents of neuropsychiatric conditions in the context of the actual patients' genetic backgrounds. Specifically, multiple strategies of brain organoid (BO) differentiation have enabled the investigation of human cerebral corticogenesis in vitro with increasing accuracy. However, the field lacks a systematic investigation of how closely the gene co-expression patterns seen in cultured BO from different protocols match those observed in fetal cortex, a paramount information for ensuring the sensitivity and accuracy of modeling disease trajectories. Here we benchmark BO against fetal corticogenesis by integrating transcriptomes from in-house differentiated cortical BO (CBO), other BO systems, human fetal brain samples processed in-house, and prenatal cortices from the BrainSpan Atlas. We identified co-expression patterns and prioritized hubs of human corticogenesis and CBO differentiation, highlighting both well-preserved and discordant trends across BO protocols. We evaluated the relevance of identified gene modules for neurodevelopmental disorders and psychiatric conditions finding significant enrichment of disease risk genes especially in modules related to neuronal maturation and synapsis development. The longitudinal transcriptomic analysis of CBO revealed a two-step differentiation composed of a fast-evolving phase, corresponding to the appearance of the main cell populations of the cortex, followed by a slow-evolving one characterized by milder transcriptional changes. Finally, we observed heterochronicity of differentiation across BO models compared to fetal cortex. Our approach provides a framework to directly compare the extent of in vivo/in vitro alignment of neurodevelopmentally relevant processes and their attending temporalities, structured as a resource to query for modeling human corticogenesis and the neuropsychiatric outcomes of its alterations.

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