4 research outputs found
Stem Cell-Derived Human Striatal Progenitors Innervate Striatal Targets and Alleviate Sensorimotor Deficit in a Rat Model of Huntington Disease
Huntington disease (HD) is an inherited late-onset neurological disorder characterized by progressive neuronal loss and disruption of cortical and basal ganglia circuits. Cell replacement using human embryonic stem cells may offer the opportunity to repair the damaged circuits and significantly ameliorate disease conditions. Here, we showed that in-vitro-differentiated human striatal progenitors undergo maturation and integrate into host circuits upon intra-striatal transplantation in a rat model of HD. By combining graft-specific immunohistochemistry, rabies virus-mediated synaptic tracing, and ex vivo electrophysiology, we showed that grafts can extend projections to the appropriate target structures, including the globus pallidus, the subthalamic nucleus, and the substantia nigra, and receive synaptic contact from both host and graft cells with 6.6 ± 1.6 inputs cell per transplanted neuron. We have also shown that transplants elicited a significant improvement in sensory-motor tasks up to 2 months post-transplant further supporting the therapeutic potential of this approach
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The coding and long noncoding single-cell atlas of the developing human fetal striatum.
Deciphering how the human striatum develops is necessary for understanding the diseases that affect this region. To decode the transcriptional modules that regulate this structure during development, we compiled a catalog of 1116 long intergenic noncoding RNAs (lincRNAs) identified de novo and then profiled 96,789 single cells from the early human fetal striatum. We found that D1 and D2 medium spiny neurons (D1- and D2-MSNs) arise from a common progenitor and that lineage commitment is established during the postmitotic transition, across a pre-MSN phase that exhibits a continuous spectrum of fate determinants. We then uncovered cell type-specific gene regulatory networks that we validated through in silico perturbation. Finally, we identified human-specific lincRNAs that contribute to the phylogenetic divergence of this structure in humans. This work delineates the cellular hierarchies governing MSN lineage commitment
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Generation of human cerebral organoids with a structured outer subventricular zone.
Outer radial glia (oRG) emerge as cortical progenitor cells that support the development of an enlarged outer subventricular zone (oSVZ) and the expansion of the neocortex. The in vitro generation of oRG is essential to investigate the underlying mechanisms of human neocortical development and expansion. By activating the STAT3 signaling pathway using leukemia inhibitory factor (LIF), which is not expressed in guided cortical organoids, we define a cortical organoid differentiation method from human pluripotent stem cells (hPSCs) that recapitulates the expansion of a progenitor pool into the oSVZ. The oSVZ comprises progenitor cells expressing specific oRG markers such as GFAP, LIFR, and HOPX, closely matching human fetal oRG. Finally, incorporating neural crest-derived LIF-producing cortical pericytes into cortical organoids recapitulates the effects of LIF treatment. These data indicate that increasing the cellular complexity of the organoid microenvironment promotes the emergence of oRG and supports a platform to study oRG in hPSC-derived brain organoids routinely
NSCR_Dataset_2020
<p>The University of Turin (UniTO) released the open-access dataset NSCR_Dataset collected for the NEUROSTEMCELLREPAIR (602278) and NSC-Reconstruct (874758) European stem cell consortia for neural cell replacement, reprogramming and functional brain repair (602278) (https://www.nsc-reconstruct.com/en/index.do).</p>
<p>NSCR-Dataset is a dataset of analysis of histological ex-vivo brain samples and behavioral parameters from Huntington's Disease (HD) rat models, after cell replacement approach of striatal progenitor cells at the site of grafting - the striatum, at different time point (see for details at short time-points: https://www.sciencedirect.com/science/article/pii/S2213671120301089?via%3Dihub). The UniTO team released this dataset publicly.</p>
<p>The dataset contains images of brain tissue stained for different cellular and molecular markers, acquired with transmission and confocal microscopes, from which analysis were performed, and the behavioral data obtained every month by testing the HD animals in different motor tasks.</p>
<p>High-resolution images have been acquired; the images will be made available.</p>