Morphogenesis and development of human telencephalic organoids in the absence and presence of exogenous extracellular matrix

Catarina Martins‐Costa(Institute of Molecular Biotechnology), Vincent A. Pham(Institute of Molecular Biotechnology), Jaydeep Sidhaye(Institute of Molecular Biotechnology), Maria Novatchkova(Institute of Molecular Biotechnology), Andrea Wiegers(Institute of Molecular Biotechnology), Angela Maria Peer(Institute of Molecular Biotechnology), Paul Möseneder(Institute of Molecular Biotechnology), Nina S. Corsini(Institute of Molecular Biotechnology), Juergen A. Knoblich(Institute of Molecular Biotechnology)
The EMBO Journal
October 16, 2023
Cited by 56Open Access
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Abstract

The establishment and maintenance of apical-basal polarity is a fundamental step in brain development, instructing the organization of neural progenitor cells (NPCs) and the developing cerebral cortex. Particularly, basally located extracellular matrix (ECM) is crucial for this process. In vitro, epithelial polarization can be achieved via endogenous ECM production, or exogenous ECM supplementation. While neuroepithelial development is recapitulated in neural organoids, the effects of different ECM sources in tissue morphogenesis remain underexplored. Here, we show that exposure to a solubilized basement membrane matrix substrate, Matrigel, at early neuroepithelial stages causes rapid tissue polarization and rearrangement of neuroepithelial architecture. In cultures exposed to pure ECM components or unexposed to any exogenous ECM, polarity acquisition is slower and driven by endogenous ECM production. After the onset of neurogenesis, tissue architecture and neuronal differentiation are largely independent of the initial ECM source, but Matrigel exposure has long-lasting effects on tissue patterning. These results advance the knowledge on mechanisms of exogenously and endogenously guided morphogenesis, demonstrating the self-sustainability of neuroepithelial cultures by endogenous processes.


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