Cerebral Organoids Uncover Mechanisms of Neural Activity Changes in Epileptogenesis

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Abstract

Neurological disorders often originate from progressive brain network dysfunctions that start years before symptoms appear. How these changes emerge in the developing human brain remains elusive due to a lack of tractable model systems. Here, we show a cerebral organoid model of Tuberous Sclerosis Complex (TSC) that recapitulates hallmarks of epileptogenesis in vitro. We compare extracellular recordings of TSC organoids with intraoperative electrocorticography from TSC patients to reveal striking functional similarities, including high-frequency oscillations - an electrical biomarker for epileptogenic tissue. In TSC, a human-specific interneuron sub-type derived from the caudal ganglionic eminence drives network hyper-synchronization through increased spontaneous firing and altered excitability. Inhibiting overproliferation of its progenitors via long-term epidermal growth factor receptor inhibition prevented the onset of this pathological phenotype at functional and morphological levels. Our work shows that organoids allow mechanistic analysis of emerging neural network phenotypes, enabling anti-epileptogenic drug testing in a human brain development model.

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