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Single-cell transcriptomics reveals multiple neuronal cell types in human midbrain-specific organoids

Lisa M. Smits, Stefano Magni, Kaoru Kinugawa, Kamil Grzyb, Joachim Luginbühl, Sònia Sabaté‐Soler, Silvia Bolognin, Jay W. Shin, Eiichiro Mori, Alexander Skupin, Jens C. Schwamborn

2020Cell and Tissue Research50 citationsDOIOpen Access PDF

Abstract

Human stem cell-derived organoids have great potential for modelling physiological and pathological processes. They recapitulate in vitro the organization and function of a respective organ or part of an organ. Human midbrain organoids (hMOs) have been described to contain midbrain-specific dopaminergic neurons that release the neurotransmitter dopamine. However, the human midbrain contains also additional neuronal cell types, which are functionally interacting with each other. Here, we analysed hMOs at high-resolution by means of single-cell RNA sequencing (scRNA-seq), imaging and electrophysiology to unravel cell heterogeneity. Our findings demonstrate that hMOs show essential neuronal functional properties as spontaneous electrophysiological activity of different neuronal subtypes, including dopaminergic, GABAergic, glutamatergic and serotonergic neurons. Recapitulating these in vivo features makes hMOs an excellent tool for in vitro disease phenotyping and drug discovery.

Topics & Concepts

OrganoidTranscriptomeCellBiologyMidbrainCell typeCell biologyComputational biologyNeuroscienceGeneGeneticsCentral nervous systemGene expressionSingle-cell and spatial transcriptomicsPluripotent Stem Cells ResearchCancer Cells and Metastasis
Single-cell transcriptomics reveals multiple neuronal cell types in human midbrain-specific organoids | Litcius