posted on 2021-05-21, 18:05authored byFokion Glykofrydis, Elise Cachat, Ieva Berzanskyte, Elaine Dzierzak, Jamie A. Davies
Multicellular systems possess an
intrinsic capacity to autonomously
generate nonrandom state distributions or morphologies in a process
termed self-organization. Facets of self-organization, such as pattern
formation, pattern elaboration, and symmetry breaking, are frequently
observed in developing embryos. Artificial stem cell-derived structures
including embryoid bodies (EBs), gastruloids, and organoids also demonstrate
self-organization, but with a limited capacity compared to their in vivo developmental counterparts. There is a pressing
need for better tools to allow user-defined control over self-organization
in these stem cell-derived structures. Here, we employ synthetic biology
to establish an efficient platform for the generation of self-organizing
coaggregates, in which HEK-293 cells overexpressing P-cadherin (Cdh3) spontaneously form cell clusters attached mostly to
one or two locations on the exterior of EBs. These Cdh3-expressing HEK cells, when further engineered to produce functional
mouse WNT3A, evoke polarized and gradual Wnt/β-catenin pathway
activation in EBs during coaggregation cultures. The localized WNT3A
provision induces nascent mesoderm specification within regions of
the EB close to the Cdh3-Wnt3a-expressing
HEK source, resulting in pattern elaboration and symmetry breaking
within EBs. This synthetic biology-based approach puts us closer toward
engineering synthetic organizers to improve the realism in stem cell-derived
structures.