16p11.2 deletion accelerates subpallial maturation and increases variability in human iPSC-derived ventral telencephalic organoids

Author:

Fetit Rana123ORCID,Barbato Michela Ilaria123,Theil Thomas123ORCID,Pratt Thomas123ORCID,Price David J.123ORCID

Affiliation:

1. Edinburgh Medical School Biomedical Sciences, The University of Edinburgh 1 Simons Initiative for the Developing Brain, Hugh Robson Building , , Edinburgh EH8 9XD , UK

2. Centre for Discovery Brain Sciences 2 , Hugh Robson Building , , Edinburgh EH8 9XD , UK

3. Edinburgh Medical School Biomedical Sciences, The University of Edinburgh 2 , Hugh Robson Building , , Edinburgh EH8 9XD , UK

Abstract

ABSTRACTInhibitory interneurons regulate cortical circuit activity, and their dysfunction has been implicated in autism spectrum disorder (ASD). 16p11.2 microdeletions are genetically linked to 1% of ASD cases. However, few studies investigate the effects of this microdeletion on interneuron development. Using ventral telencephalic organoids derived from human induced pluripotent stem cells, we have investigated the effect of this microdeletion on organoid size, progenitor proliferation and organisation into neural rosettes, ganglionic eminence marker expression at early developmental timepoints, and expression of the neuronal marker NEUN at later stages. At early stages, deletion organoids exhibited greater variations in size with concomitant increases in relative neural rosette area and the expression of the ventral telencephalic marker COUPTFII, with increased variability in these properties. Cell cycle analysis revealed an increase in total cell cycle length caused primarily by an elongated G1 phase, the duration of which also varied more than normal. At later stages, deletion organoids increased their NEUN expression. We propose that 16p11.2 microdeletions increase developmental variability and may contribute to ASD aetiology by lengthening the cell cycle of ventral progenitors, promoting premature differentiation into interneurons.

Funder

College of Medicine and Veterinary Medicine, University of Edinburgh

Wellcome Trust

Simons Initiative for the Developing Brain

University of Edinburgh

Publisher

The Company of Biologists

Subject

Developmental Biology,Molecular Biology

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