Issue 4, 2024

Deciphering potential vascularization factors of on-chip co-cultured hiPSC-derived cerebral organoids

Abstract

The lack of functional vascular system in stem cell-derived cerebral organoids (COs) limits their utility in modeling developmental processes and disease pathologies. Unlike other organs, brain vascularization is poorly understood, which makes it particularly difficult to mimic in vitro. Although several attempts have been made to vascularize COs, complete vascularization leading to functional capillary network development has only been achieved via transplantation into a mouse brain. Understanding the cues governing neurovascular communication is therefore imperative for establishing an efficient in vitro system for vascularized cerebral organoids that can emulate human brain development. Here, we used a multidisciplinary approach combining microfluidics, organoids, and transcriptomics to identify molecular changes in angiogenic programs that impede the successful in vitro vascularization of human induced pluripotent stem cell (iPSC)-derived COs. First, we established a microfluidic cerebral organoid (CO)-vascular bed (VB) co-culture system and conducted transcriptome analysis on the outermost cell layer of COs cultured on the preformed VB. Results revealed coordinated regulation of multiple pro-angiogenic factors and their downstream targets. The VEGF-HIF1A-AKT network was identified as a central pathway involved in the angiogenic response of cerebral organoids to the preformed VB. Among the 324 regulated genes associated with angiogenesis, six transcripts represented significantly regulated growth factors with the capacity to influence angiogenic activity during co-culture. Subsequent on-chip experiments demonstrated the angiogenic and vasculogenic potential of cysteine-rich angiogenic inducer 61 (CYR61) and hepatoma-derived growth factor (HDGF) as potential enhancers of organoid vascularization. Our study provides the first global analysis of cerebral organoid response to three-dimensional microvasculature for in vitro vascularization.

Graphical abstract: Deciphering potential vascularization factors of on-chip co-cultured hiPSC-derived cerebral organoids

Supplementary files

Article information

Article type
Paper
Submitted
30 Oct 2023
Accepted
22 Dec 2023
First published
29 Jan 2024
This article is Open Access
Creative Commons BY-NC license

Lab Chip, 2024,24, 680-696

Deciphering potential vascularization factors of on-chip co-cultured hiPSC-derived cerebral organoids

M. Shaji, A. Tamada, K. Fujimoto, K. Muguruma, S. L. Karsten and R. Yokokawa, Lab Chip, 2024, 24, 680 DOI: 10.1039/D3LC00930K

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