“Mini-Brains” Shed Light on How Imbalances Contribute to Neurodevelopmental Disorders

Scientists Reveal How a Growing Organ Maintains a Neuronal Balance

Scientists can now study neuronal activity by using stem cells to create parts of brain called organoids.

Using human pluripotent stem cells to grow an organoid called the human medial ganglionic eminence, Yale researchers shed light on how the human brain evolved and how imbalances contribute to many neurodevelopmental disorders.

Scientists can now explore in a laboratory dish how the human brain develops by creating organoids — distinct, three-dimensional regions of the brain. In research published in Cell Stem Cell, Yale scientists coaxed early-stage stem cells to create and fuse two types of organoids from different brain regions to show how the developing brain maintains proper balance of excitatory and inhibitory neurons.

A failure to maintain this balance has been implicated in a host of neurodevelopmental disorders such as autism and schizophrenia.

“The inhibitory neurons migrate from specific areas of the embryonic brain to the region where excitatory neurons are being produced,” said senior author In-Hyun Park, associate professor of genetics and associate professor in the Child Study Center. “What we did is to fuse these two areas and watched the process unfold.”

The Yale team used human pluripotent stem cells to grow an organoid called the human medial ganglionic eminence, which produces inhibitory neurons and plays a crucial but brief role in the early development of the cortex. By merging this structure with another that produces excitatory neurons they could track the migration of the inhibitory cells, which provide a crucial check on excitatory neurons.

Understanding the process will not only help researchers understand how the human brain evolved, but shed light on how imbalances contribute to many neurodevelopmental disorders.

For instance, excess activity by excitatory neurons has been implicated in schizophrenia while too much inhibitory neuronal activity may contribute to depression, Park said. The imbalance has also been linked to the development of autism spectrum disorders he said.

Yale’s Yangfei Xiang and Yoshiaki Tanaka contributed as first authors of the paper, which was funded primarily by Connecticut Stem Cell Research Grants.

Reference: “Fusion of Regionally Specified hPSC-Derived Organoids Models Human Brain Development and Interneuron Migration” by Yangfei Xiang, Yoshiaki Tanaka, Benjamin Patterson, Young-Jin Kang, Gubbi Govindaiah, Naomi Roselaar, Bilal Cakir, Kun-Yong Kim, Adam P. Lombroso, Sung-Min Hwang, Mei Zhong, Edouard G. Stanley, Andrew G. Elefanty, Janice R. Naegele, Sang-Hun Lee, Sherman M. Weissman and In-Hyun Park, 27 July 2017, Cell Stem Cell.
DOI: 10.1016/j.stem.2017.07.007

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