Abstract

ABSTRACTThe basal lamina is a specialized sheet of dense extracellular matrix (ECM) linked to the plasma membrane of specific cell types in their tissue context, which serves as a structural scaffold for organ genesis and maintenance. Disruption of the basal lamina and its functions is central to many disease processes, including cancer metastasis, kidney disease, eye disease, muscular dystrophies and specific types of brain malformation. The latter three pathologies occur in the α-dystroglycanopathies, which are caused by dysfunction of the ECM receptor α-dystroglycan. However, opportunities to study the basal lamina in various human disease tissues are restricted owing to its limited accessibility. Here, we report the generation of embryoid bodies from human induced pluripotent stem cells that model the basal lamina. Embryoid bodies cultured via this protocol mimic pre-gastrulation embryonic development, consisting of an epithelial core surrounded by a basal lamina and a peripheral layer of ECM-secreting endoderm. In α-dystroglycanopathy patient embryoid bodies, electron and fluorescence microscopy reveal ultrastructural basal lamina defects and reduced ECM accumulation. By starting from patient-derived cells, these results establish a method for the in vitro synthesis of patient-specific basal lamina and recapitulate disease-relevant ECM defects seen in the α-dystroglycanopathies. Finally, we apply this system to evaluate an experimental ribitol supplement therapy on genetically diverse α-dystroglycanopathy patient samples.This article has an associated First Person interview with the first author of the paper.

Highlights

  • Metazoan life relies on tissue compartmentalization to form ordered, discrete organs

  • To study patient-specific basal lamina in a model system, we developed a protocol to generate extracellular matrix (ECM)-containing spheroids from human induced pluripotent stem cells, which we refer to as embryoid bodies. hiPSC-derived embryoid bodies produce their own basal lamina and represent a simplified 3D system to investigate human ECM and its receptors in diverse genetic contexts

  • Human embryoid bodies mimic pre-gastrulation development To establish an hiPSC-based model of basal lamina assembly, we sought to adapt a well-characterized 3D tissue culture method originally used with human embryonic stem cells (ESCs) (Ungrin et al, 2008)

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Summary

Introduction

Metazoan life relies on tissue compartmentalization to form ordered, discrete organs. Justice Received 17 October 2019; Accepted 30 April 2020 comprising the basal lamina are laminin isoforms, perlecan, nidogen and collagen type IV, forming a complex lattice anchored to cell surface receptors (Yurchenco, 2011). This cell-ensheathing basal lamina is generally inter-connected on its acellular matrix side to a ‘lamina reticularis’ composed of fibrillar collagens, microfibrils and proteoglycans. The terms ‘basal lamina’ and ‘basement membrane’ are sometimes used interchangeably Here they will refer to distinct structures, with the basal lamina being the dense, cell-attached component of the basement membrane

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