4.8 Article

Self-organization of human dorsal-ventral forebrain structures by light induced SHH

Journal

NATURE COMMUNICATIONS
Volume 12, Issue 1, Pages -

Publisher

NATURE PORTFOLIO
DOI: 10.1038/s41467-021-26881-w

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Funding

  1. Kavli-foundation
  2. [EMBO-LTF-254-2019]

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The authors in this study successfully modeled human organizers in differentiating human embryonic stem cells using light stimulus, generating spatially resolved proximal-distal patterns and mediolateral neural patterns. They demonstrated that morphogen light-stimulation is a scalable tool that induces self-organizing centers.
Organizing centers act to pattern surrounding tissues during embryogenesis through the secretion of morphogens. Here the authors model human organizers using light stimulus to geometrically confine SHH expression in differentiating hESCs, generating spatially resolved proximal distal patterns. Organizing centers secrete morphogens that specify the emergence of germ layers and the establishment of the body's axes during embryogenesis. While traditional experimental embryology tools have been instrumental in dissecting the molecular aspects of organizers in model systems, they are impractical in human in-vitro model systems to dissect the relationships between signaling and fate along embryonic coordinates. To systematically study human embryonic organizer centers, we devised a collection of optogenetic ePiggyBac vectors to express a photoactivatable Cre-loxP recombinase, that allows the systematic induction of organizer structures by shining blue-light on human embryonic stem cells (hESCs). We used a light stimulus to geometrically confine SHH expression in neuralizing hESCs. This led to the self-organization of mediolateral neural patterns. scRNA-seq analysis established that these structures represent the dorsal-ventral forebrain, at the end of the first month of development. Here, we show that morphogen light-stimulation is a scalable tool that induces self-organizing centers.

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