Abstract

Maternal alcohol exposure during pregnancy can substantially impact the development of the fetus, causing a range of symptoms, known as fetal alcohol spectrum disorders (FASDs), such as cognitive dysfunction and psychiatric disorders, with the pathophysiology and mechanisms largely unknown. Recently developed human cerebral organoids from induced pluripotent stem cells are similar to fetal brains in the aspects of development and structure. These models allow more relevant in vitro systems to be developed for studying FASDs than animal models. Modeling binge drinking using human cerebral organoids, we sought to quantify the downstream toxic effects of alcohol (ethanol) on neural pathology phenotypes and signaling pathways within the organoids. The results revealed that alcohol exposure resulted in unhealthy organoids at cellular, subcellular, bioenergetic metabolism, and gene expression levels. Alcohol induced apoptosis on organoids. The apoptotic effects of alcohol on the organoids depended on the alcohol concentration and varied between cell types. Specifically, neurons were more vulnerable to alcohol-induced apoptosis than astrocytes. The alcohol-treated organoids exhibit ultrastructural changes such as disruption of mitochondria cristae, decreased intensity of mitochondrial matrix, and disorganized cytoskeleton. Alcohol exposure also resulted in mitochondrial dysfunction and metabolic stress in the organoids as evidenced by (1) decreased mitochondrial oxygen consumption rates being linked to basal respiration, ATP production, proton leak, maximal respiration and spare respiratory capacity, and (2) increase of non-mitochondrial respiration in alcohol-treated organoids compared with control groups. Furthermore, we found that alcohol treatment affected the expression of 199 genes out of 17,195 genes analyzed. Bioinformatic analyses showed the association of these dysregulated genes with 37 pathways related to clinically relevant pathologies such as psychiatric disorders, behavior, nervous system development and function, organismal injury and abnormalities, and cellular development. Notably, 187 of these genes are critically involved in neurodevelopment, and/or implicated in nervous system physiology and neurodegeneration. Furthermore, the identified genes are key regulators of multiple pathways linked in networks. This study extends for the first time animal models of binge drinking-related FASDs to a human model, allowing in-depth analyses of neurotoxicity at tissue, cellular, subcellular, metabolism, and gene levels. Hereby, we provide novel insights into alcohol-induced pathologic phenotypes, cell type-specific vulnerability, and affected signaling pathways and molecular networks, that can contribute to a better understanding of the developmental neurotoxic effects of binge drinking during pregnancy.

Highlights

  • Alcohol consumption by pregnant women can adversely affect the developing fetus, resulting in a spectrum of abnormalities collectively known as fetal alcohol spectrum disorders (FASDs), with a prevalence ofArzua et al Translational Psychiatry (2020)10:3471.1–5.0% in the USA1,2

  • The induced pluripotent stem cells (iPSCs) were reprogrammed from fibroblasts as described previously16,41,42. iPSCs were maintained on MatrigelTM (Corning Inc, Corning, NY, USA)-coated Petri dishes in mTeSR1 medium supplemented with 1% penicillin/ streptomycin (Thermo Fisher Scientific, Waltham, MA, USA) under hypoxic conditions (4% O2) at 37 °C

  • Results iPSC-derived 3D cerebral organoids develop over time and are composed of different brain cell types iPSCs grew as colonies in normal stem cell culture conditions and expressed pluripotent cell markers

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Summary

Introduction

Alcohol consumption by pregnant women can adversely affect the developing fetus, resulting in a spectrum of abnormalities collectively known as fetal alcohol spectrum disorders (FASDs), with a prevalence ofArzua et al Translational Psychiatry (2020)10:3471.1–5.0% in the USA1,2. The effects of prenatal alcohol (ethanol) exposure can lead to lifelong physical, behavioral, cognitive, and psychological problems. 90% of individuals with FASD suffered from mental problems such as depression, anxiety, suicide threats, impulsive behavior, attention deficit, hyperactivity disorder, inappropriate sexual behavior, or substance use disorder[8,9,10,11]. Such variability in neurobehavioral outcomes is associated with genetic background, alcohol consumption patterns, timing of maternal drinking in terms of gestational age, and nutritional intake[6]. It was shown that genetic polymorphisms in the alcohol dehydrogenase 1B (ADH1B) gene, a gene responsible for alcohol metabolism, can lead to an increase of vulnerability to FASDs12

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