Mechanical impact on neural stem cell lineage decisions in human brain organoids

Read the full article See related articles

Listed in

This article is not in any list yet, why not save it to one of your lists.
Log in to save this article

Abstract

During neurodevelopment neural stem cells give rise to a spatially patterned tissue in which a regionally differentially regulated balance between proliferation and differentiation produces the fine-tuned number of neurons and macroglia necessary for a functional central nervous system. The cells driving these highly intricated developmental processes of patterning, growth and differentiation are constantly exposed to a mechanical environment that is however variable between different brain regions and along differentiation trajectories. Here we demonstrate that both, acute mechanical manipulations as well as a persistent change in the mechanical environment provided to human brain organoids, instruct neural stem cell lineage decisions. Furthermore, we dissect the underlying changes in the molecular program of organoid-resident cells by bulk- and single cell RNA-sequencing and reveal that mechanical manipulations impact on molecular programs governing early patterning events as well as cell-type specifically alter cellular metabolism. Thus, our results unravel a regulatory network linking mechanics and neural stem cell lineage decisions.

Article activity feed