Litcius/Paper detail

Modelling co-development between the somites and neural tube in human trunk-like structures

Komal Makwana, Louise Tilley, Probir Chakravarty, Jamie Thompson, Peter Baillie‐Johnson, Ignacio Rodríguez-Polo, Naomi Moris

2025Nature Cell Biology11 citationsDOIOpen Access PDF

Abstract

Human stem cell-based embryo models provide experimentally amenable in vitro systems for developmental research. A key feature of embryo models is their multi-lineage differentiation, which allows for the study of tissue co-development. Here we develop human trunk-like structures that have morphologically organized somites and a neural tube that form through self-organized, endogenous signalling. Transcriptomic comparison with human embryo datasets suggests that human trunk-like structure cells approximate Carnegie stage 13-14 (28-35 days after fertilization). The absence of a notochord leads to a dorsal identity, but exogenous Sonic Hedgehog signalling activation ventralizes both the somites and the neural tube in a dose-dependent manner. We further identify reciprocal signalling: neural tube-derived cues induce medial ALDH1A2 in somites, which in turn generate retinoic acid signals that drive spontaneous neural-tube patterning. Together, our data highlight the value of modularity in embryo models, which we leverage to explore human trunk co-development.

Topics & Concepts

Neural tubeNotochordBiologyEmbryoCell biologyRetinoic acidOrganogenesisSonic hedgehogNeural plateAnatomyNeurulationNeuroscienceModularity (biology)Floor plateBody planNeural crestEmbryogenesisNeural stem cellEndogenyArtificial neural networkNeural foldPluripotent Stem Cells ResearchDevelopmental Biology and Gene RegulationNeurogenesis and neuroplasticity mechanisms