Cerebral organoids display dynamic clonal growth and tunable tissue replenishment

Dominik Lindenhofer(Institute of Molecular Biotechnology), Simon Haendeler(Max Perutz Labs), Christopher Esk(Institute of Molecular Biotechnology), Jamie B. Littleboy(Institute of Molecular Biotechnology), Clarisse Brunet Avalos(Centre National de la Recherche Scientifique), Julia Naas(Max Perutz Labs), Florian Pflug(Okinawa Institute of Science and Technology Graduate University), Eline G. P. van de Ven(Institute of Molecular Biotechnology), Daniel Reumann(Institute of Molecular Biotechnology), Alexandre D. Baffet(Centre National de la Recherche Scientifique), Arndt von Haeseler(University of Vienna), Juergen A. Knoblich(Institute of Molecular Biotechnology)
Nature Cell Biology
May 1, 2024
Cited by 30Open Access
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Abstract

During brain development, neural progenitors expand through symmetric divisions before giving rise to differentiating cell types via asymmetric divisions. Transition between those modes varies among individual neural stem cells, resulting in clones of different sizes. Imaging-based lineage tracing allows for lineage analysis at high cellular resolution but systematic approaches to analyse clonal behaviour of entire tissues are currently lacking. Here we implement whole-tissue lineage tracing by genomic DNA barcoding in 3D human cerebral organoids, to show that individual stem cell clones produce progeny on a vastly variable scale. By using stochastic modelling we find that variable lineage sizes arise because a subpopulation of lineages retains symmetrically dividing cells. We show that lineage sizes can adjust to tissue demands after growth perturbation via chemical ablation or genetic restriction of a subset of cells in chimeric organoids. Our data suggest that adaptive plasticity of stem cell populations ensures robustness of development in human brain organoids.


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