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1.
J Pers Med ; 14(3)2024 Feb 29.
Article in English | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-38541013

ABSTRACT

Transthyretin amyloid cardiomyopathy (ATTR-CM) is a progressive systemic disease involving the extracellular deposition of misfolded transthyretin protein. The hereditary subtype is caused by mutations in the transthyretin (TTR) gene. An estimated 2-3% of individuals of African American (AA) ancestry carry the p.Val142Ile (V142I, also referred to as V122I) TTR pathogenic variant. The non-specific clinical nature of ATTR-CM makes it challenging to diagnose clinically, and the high allele frequency of TTR V142I suggests that many patients with hereditary ATTR-CM may not have been tested. An analysis of electronic health record data from over 13,000 AA patients with a diagnostic code for heart disease or arrhythmia who also had additional amyloid-related findings were not diagnosed with amyloidosis at higher rates than those with heart failure or arrhythmia who did not have additional amyloid-related clinical diagnoses. Similarly, after genotyping 666 AA patients with heart failure or arrhythmia, TTR V142I carriers appeared to be clinically indistinguishable based on amyloid-related non-cardiac diagnoses from those who did not carry the allele. No additional TTR gene sequence variants were found in the TTR wildtype V142V patients with heart failure or arrhythmia who had additional amyloid-related diagnoses. Genetic testing for ATTR-CM may be important for timely diagnosis.

2.
Stem Cells ; 42(2): 107-115, 2024 Feb 08.
Article in English | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-37995336

ABSTRACT

Advanced technologies have enabled the engineering of self-organized 3-dimensional (3D) cellular structures from human induced pluripotent stem cells (hiPSCs), namely organoids, which recapitulate some key features of tissue development and functions of the human central nervous system (CNS). While hiPSC-derived 3D CNS organoids hold promise in providing a human-specific platform for studying CNS development and diseases, most of them do not incorporate the full range of implicated cell types, including vascular cell components and microglia, limiting their ability to accurately recreate the CNS environment and their utility in the study of certain aspects of the disease. Here we have developed a novel approach, called vascularized brain assembloids, for constructing hiPSC-derived 3D CNS structures with a higher level of cellular complexity. This is achieved by integrating forebrain organoids with common myeloid progenitors and phenotypically stabilized human umbilical vein endothelial cells (VeraVecs), which can be cultured and expanded in serum-free conditions. Compared with organoids, these assembloids exhibited enhanced neuroepithelial proliferation, advanced astrocytic maturation, and increased synapse numbers. Strikingly, the assembloids derived from hiPSCs harboring the tauP301S mutation exhibited increased levels of total tau and phosphorylated tau, along with a higher proportion of rod-like microglia-like cells and enhanced astrocytic activation, when compared to the assembloids derived from isogenic hiPSCs. Additionally, the tauP301S assembloids showed an altered profile of neuroinflammatory cytokines. This innovative assembloid technology serves as a compelling proof-of-concept model, opening new avenues for unraveling the intricate complexities of the human brain and accelerating progress in the development of effective treatments for neurological disorders.


Subject(s)
Induced Pluripotent Stem Cells , Tauopathies , Humans , Brain , Central Nervous System , Organoids , Human Umbilical Vein Endothelial Cells
3.
bioRxiv ; 2023 Jul 02.
Article in English | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-37425812

ABSTRACT

Advanced technologies have enabled the engineering of self-organized 3-dimensional (3D) cellular structures from human induced pluripotent stem cells (hiPSCs), namely organoids, which recapitulate some key features of tissue development and functions of the human central nervous system (CNS). While hiPSC-derived 3D CNS organoids hold promise in providing a human-specific platform for studying CNS development and diseases, most of them do not incorporate the full range of implicated cell types, including vascular cell components and microglia, limiting their ability to accurately recreate the CNS environment and their utility in the study of certain aspects of the disease. Here we've developed a novel approach, called vascularized brain assembloids, for constructing hiPSC-derived 3D CNS structures with a higher level of cellular complexity. This is achieved by integrating forebrain organoids with common myeloid progenitors and phenotypically stabilized human umbilical vein endothelial cells (VeraVecs™), which can be cultured and expanded in serum-free conditions. Compared with organoids, these assembloids exhibited enhanced neuroepithelial proliferation, advanced astrocytic maturation, and increased synapse numbers. Strikingly, the assembloids derived from hiPSCs harboring the tau P301S mutation exhibited increased levels of total tau and phosphorylated tau, along with a higher proportion of rod-like microglia-like cells and enhanced astrocytic activation, when compared to the assembloids derived from isogenic hiPSCs. Additionally, they showed an altered profile of neuroinflammatory cytokines. This innovative assembloid technology serves as a compelling proof-of-concept model, opening new avenues for unraveling the intricate complexities of the human brain and accelerating progress in the development of effective treatments for neurological disorders. Significance Statement: Modeling neurodegeneration in human in vitro systems has proved challenging and requires innovative tissue engineering techniques to create systems that can accurately capture the physiological features of the CNS to enable the study of disease processes. The authors develop a novel assembloid model which integrates neuroectodermal cells with endothelial cells and microglia, two critical cell types that are commonly missing from traditional organoid models. They then apply this model to investigate early manifestations of pathology in the context of tauopathy and uncover early astrocyte and microglia reactivity as a result of the tau P301S mutation.

4.
J Tissue Eng ; 13: 20417314221113391, 2022.
Article in English | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-35898331

ABSTRACT

Engineered three-dimensional (3D) in vitro and ex vivo neural tissues, also known as "mini brains and spinal cords in a dish," can be derived from different types of human stem cells via several differentiation protocols. In general, human mini brains are micro-scale physiological systems consisting of mixed populations of neural progenitor cells, glial cells, and neurons that may represent key features of human brain anatomy and function. To date, these specialized 3D tissue structures can be characterized into spheroids, organoids, assembloids, organ-on-a-chip and their various combinations based on generation procedures and cellular components. These 3D CNS models incorporate complex cell-cell interactions and play an essential role in bridging the gap between two-dimensional human neuroglial cultures and animal models. Indeed, they provide an innovative platform for disease modeling and therapeutic cell replacement, especially shedding light on the potential to realize personalized medicine for neurological disorders when combined with the revolutionary human induced pluripotent stem cell technology. In this review, we highlight human 3D CNS models developed from a variety of experimental strategies, emphasize their advances and remaining challenges, evaluate their state-of-the-art applications in recapitulating crucial phenotypic aspects of many CNS diseases, and discuss the role of contemporary technologies in the prospective improvement of their composition, consistency, complexity, and maturation.

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