| Literature DB >> 34045434 |
Abdel Rahman Abdel Fattah1, Brian Daza1, Gregorius Rustandi1, Miguel Ángel Berrocal-Rubio1, Benjamin Gorissen2,3, Suresh Poovathingal4, Kristofer Davie4, Jorge Barrasa-Fano5, Mar Cóndor5, Xuanye Cao6, Derek Hadar Rosenzweig7, Yunping Lei6, Richard Finnell8, Catherine Verfaillie9, Maurilio Sampaolesi10, Peter Dedecker11, Hans Van Oosterwyck5,12, Stein Aerts4,13, Adrian Ranga14.
Abstract
Tissues achieve their complex spatial organization through an interplay between gene regulatory networks, cell-cell communication, and physical interactions mediated by mechanical forces. Current strategies to generate in-vitro tissues have largely failed to implement such active, dynamically coordinated mechanical manipulations, relying instead on extracellular matrices which respond to, rather than impose mechanical forces. Here, we develop devices that enable the actuation of organoids. We show that active mechanical forces increase growth and lead to enhanced patterning in an organoid model of the neural tube derived from single human pluripotent stem cells (hPSC). Using a combination of single-cell transcriptomics and immunohistochemistry, we demonstrate that organoid mechanoregulation due to actuation operates in a temporally restricted competence window, and that organoid response to stretch is mediated extracellularly by matrix stiffness and intracellularly by cytoskeleton contractility and planar cell polarity. Exerting active mechanical forces on organoids using the approaches developed here is widely applicable and should enable the generation of more reproducible, programmable organoid shape, identity and patterns, opening avenues for the use of these tools in regenerative medicine and disease modelling applications.Entities:
Year: 2021 PMID: 34045434 DOI: 10.1038/s41467-021-22952-0
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Nat Commun ISSN: 2041-1723 Impact factor: 14.919