Cerebral organoids reveal early cortical maldevelopment in schizophrenia-computational anatomy and genomics, role of FGFR1.
E K StachowiakC A BensonS T NarlaA DimitriL E Bayona ChuyeS DhimanK HarikrishnanS ElahiD FreedmanKristen J BrennandP SarderM K StachowiakPublished in: Translational psychiatry (2017)
Studies of induced pluripotent stem cells (iPSCs) from schizophrenia patients and control individuals revealed that the disorder is programmed at the preneuronal stage, involves a common dysregulated mRNA transcriptome, and identified Integrative Nuclear FGFR1 Signaling a common dysregulated mechanism. We used human embryonic stem cell (hESC) and iPSC-derived cerebral organoids from four controls and three schizophrenia patients to model the first trimester of in utero brain development. The schizophrenia organoids revealed an abnormal scattering of proliferating Ki67+ neural progenitor cells (NPCs) from the ventricular zone (VZ), throughout the intermediate (IZ) and cortical (CZ) zones. TBR1 pioneer neurons and reelin, which guides cortico-petal migration, were restricted from the schizophrenia cortex. The maturing neurons were abundantly developed in the subcortical regions, but were depleted from the schizophrenia cortex. The decreased intracortical connectivity was denoted by changes in the orientation and morphology of calretinin interneurons. In schizophrenia organoids, nuclear (n)FGFR1 was abundantly expressed by developing subcortical cells, but was depleted from the neuronal committed cells (NCCs) of the CZ. Transfection of dominant negative and constitutively active nFGFR1 caused widespread disruption of the neuro-ontogenic gene networks in hESC-derived NPCs and NCCs. The fgfr1 gene was the most prominent FGFR gene expressed in NPCs and NCCs, and blocking with PD173074 reproduced both the loss of nFGFR1 and cortical neuronal maturation in hESC cerebral organoids. We report for the first time, progression of the cortical malformation in schizophrenia and link it to altered FGFR1 signaling. Targeting INFS may offer a preventive treatment of schizophrenia.
Keyphrases
- bipolar disorder
- induced pluripotent stem cells
- stem cells
- end stage renal disease
- genome wide
- induced apoptosis
- single cell
- subarachnoid hemorrhage
- ejection fraction
- chronic kidney disease
- heart failure
- spinal cord
- newly diagnosed
- endothelial cells
- squamous cell carcinoma
- white matter
- prognostic factors
- cerebral ischemia
- copy number
- drug delivery
- transcription factor
- cell cycle arrest
- rna seq
- neoadjuvant chemotherapy
- bone marrow
- spinal cord injury
- locally advanced
- patient reported outcomes