Abstract

This project aims to establish and characterize an in vitro model of the developing human brain for the purpose of testing drugs and chemicals. To accurately assess risk, a model needs to recapitulate the complex interactions between different types of glial cells and neurons in a three-dimensional platform. Moreover, human cells are preferred over cells from rodents to eliminate cross-species differences in sensitivity to chemicals. Previously, we established conditions to culture rat primary cells as three-dimensional aggregates, which will be humanized and evaluated here with induced pluripotent stem cells (iPSCs). The use of iPSCs allows us to address gene/environment interactions as well as the potential of chemicals to interfere with epigenetic mechanisms. Additionally, iPSCs afford us the opportunity to study the effect of chemicals during very early stages of brain development. It is well recognized that assays for testing toxicity in the developing brain must consider differences in sensitivity and susceptibility that arise depending on the time of exposure. This model will reflect critical developmental processes such as proliferation, differentiation, lineage specification, migration, axonal growth, dendritic arborization and synaptogenesis, which will probably display differences in sensitivity to different types of chemicals. Functional endpoints will evaluate the complex cell-to-cell interactions that are affected in neurodevelopment through chemical perturbation, and the efficacy of drug intervention to prevent or reverse phenotypes. The model described is designed to assess developmental neurotoxicity effects on unique processes occurring during human brain development by leveraging human iPSCs from diverse genetic backgrounds, which can be differentiated into different cell types of the central nervous system. Our goal is to demonstrate the feasibility of the personalized model using iPSCs derived from individuals with neurodevelopmental disorders caused by known mutations and chromosomal aberrations. Notably, such a human brain model will be a versatile tool for more complex testing platforms and strategies as well as research into central nervous system physiology and pathology.

Highlights

  • This project is part of the programmed research initiated by the National Institutes of Health, the US Food and Drug Administration and the Defense Advanced Research Projects Agency to develop human-on-a-chip tools to assess the safety and efficacy of countermeasures to biological and chemical terrorism and warfare

  • Very few substances have so far been confirmed to result in developmental neurotoxicity (DNT) [2], while neurodevelopmental disorders such as autism and attention-deficit hyperactivity disorder are being diagnosed at ever-increasing rates [3]

  • A critical constraint for routine DNT assessment of drugs and chemicals is the high cost of testing, approximately $1.4 million per substance for the current regulatory test strategy according to the DNT guidelines [4,5]

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Summary

Introduction

This project is part of the programmed research initiated by the National Institutes of Health, the US Food and Drug Administration and the Defense Advanced Research Projects Agency to develop human-on-a-chip tools to assess the safety and efficacy of countermeasures to biological and chemical terrorism and warfare. The use of stem cells has the potential to create new humanized models for toxicity testing. IPSCs seem to be more stable, with a higher neuronal differentiation efficiency than, for example, somatic stem cells [26,27].

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