posted on 2018-11-23, 00:00authored byWill Collins, Nicolas Rouleau, Mattia Bonzanni, Kevin Kapner, Alex Jeremiah, Chuang Du, Emmanuel N. Pothos, David L. Kaplan
The substantia nigra
pars compacta (SNpc) is a discrete region
of the brain that exhibits a dark pigment, neuromelanin (NM), a biomaterial
with unique properties and the subject of ongoing research pertaining
to neurodegenerative conditions like Parkinson’s disease (PD).
Obtaining human tissue to isolate this pigment is costly and labor
intensive, making it necessary to find alternatives to model the biochemical
interaction of NM and its implications on PD. To address this limitation,
we modified our established silk 3D brain tissue model to emulate
key characteristics of the SNpc by using a structural analogue of
NM to examine the effects of the material on dopaminergic neurons
using Lund’s human mesencephalon (LUHMES) cells. We utilized
a sepia-melanin, squid ink, derived NM analogue (NM-sim) to chelate
ferric iron, and this iron-neuromelanin precipitate (Fe-NM) was purified
and characterized. We then exposed LUHMES dopaminergic cells to the
NM-sim, Fe-NM-sim, and control vehicle within 3D silk protein scaffolds.
The presence of both NM-sim and Fe-NM-sim in the scaffolds negatively
impacted spontaneous electrical activity from the LUMES networks,
as evidenced by changes in local field potential (LFP) electrophysiological
recordings. Furthermore, the Fe-NM-sim precipitate generated peroxides,
depleted nutrients/antioxidants, and increased protein oxidation by
carbonylation in sustained (>2 weeks) 3D cultures, thereby contributing
to cell dysfunction. The results suggest that this 3D tissue engineered
brain-like model may provide useful readouts related to PD neuro-toxicology
research.