posted on 2022-01-19, 21:29authored byJoohyung Son, Soo Jeong Park, Taehyeong Ha, Sang-Nam Lee, Hyeon-Yeol Cho, Jeong-Woo Choi
Combining
human brain organoids holds great potential in recapitulating
the human brain’s histological features and modeling neural
disorders. However, current combined-brain organoid models focus on
the internal interactions between different brain regions. In this
study, we develop an engineered brain–spinal cord assembloid
(eBSA) by coculturing cerebral organoids (COs) and motor neuron spheroids
(MNSs). By connecting COs and MNSs, we generate a terminal for signal
transfer from the brain to the whole body by mimicking the brain–spinal
cord connection. After the formation of COs from human induced pluripotent
stem cells and MNSs from human neural stem cells, MNSs are prepatterned
into specific CO regions and assembled to form an eBSA. Caffeine serves
as a neurochemical model to demonstrate neural signal transmission.
When the MNSs in the eBSA contact the multielectrode array, the eBSA
successfully shows an increased neural spiking speed on the motor
neuron region by caffeine treatment, which means that neural stimulation
signals transfer from the COs to MNSs. The neural stimulation effects
of caffeine are tested on the MNSs only to prove the eBSA system’s
neural signal transmission, and there were no stimulus effects. Our
results demonstrate that the eBSA system can monitor a caffeine-mediated
excitatory signal as an output signal from the brain to the spinal
cord. We believe that the eBSA system can be utilized as a screening
platform to validate the stimulus signal transfer by neurochemicals.
In addition, the accumulation of understanding of the neural signal
transfer from CNS to PNS will provide better knowledge for controlling
muscle actuators with the nervous system.