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Biofidelic dynamic compression of human cortical spheroids reproduces neurotrauma phenotypes
Author(s) -
Aaron R. Shoemaker,
Ian E. Jones,
Kira Jeffris,
Gina Gabrielli,
Alyssa G. Togliatti,
Rajeswari Pichika,
Éric Martin,
Evangelos Kiskinis,
Colin K. Franz,
John D. Finan
Publication year - 2021
Publication title -
disease models and mechanisms
Language(s) - English
Resource type - Journals
eISSN - 1754-8411
pISSN - 1754-8403
DOI - 10.1242/dmm.048916
Subject(s) - spheroid , traumatic brain injury , phenotype , in vitro , human brain , electrophysiology , neuroscience , cell , neurofilament , microbiology and biotechnology , biology , viability assay , pathology , medicine , gene , biochemistry , immunohistochemistry , psychiatry
Fundamental questions about patient heterogeneity and human-specific pathophysiology currently obstruct progress towards a therapy for traumatic brain injury (TBI). Human in vitro models have the potential to address these questions. Three-dimensional spheroidal cell culture protocols for human-origin neural cells have several important advantages over their two-dimensional monolayer counterparts. Three-dimensional spheroidal cultures may mature more quickly, develop more biofidelic electrophysiological activity and/or reproduce some aspects of brain architecture. Here, we present the first human in vitro model of non-penetrating TBI employing three-dimensional spheroidal cultures. We used a custom-built device to traumatize these spheroids in a quantifiable, repeatable and biofidelic manner, and correlated the heterogeneous mechanical strain field with the injury phenotype. Trauma reduced cell viability, mitochondrial membrane potential and spontaneous synchronous electrophysiological activity in the spheroids. Electrophysiological deficits emerged at lower injury severities than changes in cell viability. Also, traumatized spheroids secreted lactate dehydrogenase, a marker of cell damage, and neurofilament light chain, a promising clinical biomarker of neurotrauma. These results demonstrate that three-dimensional human in vitro models can reproduce important phenotypes of neurotrauma in vitro.

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