Exposure to the antiretroviral drug dolutegravir impairs structure and neurogenesis in a forebrain organoid model of human embryonic cortical development.

IF 3.5 3区 医学 Q2 NEUROSCIENCES
Frontiers in Molecular Neuroscience Pub Date : 2024-11-06 eCollection Date: 2024-01-01 DOI:10.3389/fnmol.2024.1459877
Emma LaNoce, Daniel Y Zhang, Alan Garcia-Epelboim, Yijing Su, Yusha Sun, Giana Alepa, Angelina R Angelucci, Cagla Akay-Espinoza, Kelly L Jordan-Sciutto, Hongjun Song, Guo-Li Ming, Kimberly M Christian
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引用次数: 0

Abstract

Introduction: For many therapeutic drugs, including antiretroviral drugs used to treat people living with HIV-1 (PLWH), we have little data on the potential effects on the developing human brain due to limited access to tissue and historical constraints on the inclusion of pregnant populations in clinical trials. Human induced pluripotent stem cells (iPSCs) offer a new avenue to gain insight on how drugs may impact human cell types representative of the developing central nervous system. To prevent vertical transmission of HIV and promote the health of pregnant PLWH, antiretroviral therapy must be initiated and/or maintained throughout pregnancy. However, many antiretroviral drugs are approved for widespread use following clinical testing only in non-pregnant populations and there may be limited information on potential teratogenicity until pregnancy outcomes are evaluated. The integrase strand transfer inhibitor dolutegravir (DTG) is a frontline antiretroviral drug that is effective in viral suppression of HIV but was previously reported to be associated with a slight increase in the risk for neural tube defects in one study, although this has not been replicated in other cohorts.

Methods: To directly investigate the potential impact of DTG on human cortical neurogenesis, we measured the effects of daily drug exposure on the early stages of corticogenesis in a human iPSC-based forebrain organoid model. We quantified organoid size and structure and analyzed gene and protein expression to evaluate the impact of several doses of DTG on organoid development.

Results: We observed deficits in organoid structure and impaired neurogenesis in DTG-treated organoids compared to vehicle-treated control organoids after 20 or 40 days in culture. Our highest dose of DTG (10 μM) resulted in significantly smaller organoids with a reduced density of neural rosette structures compared to vehicle-treated controls. Mechanistically, RNA-sequencing and immunohistological analysis suggests dysregulated amino acid transport and activation of the integrated stress response in the DTG-treated organoids, and functionally, a small molecule integrated stress response inhibitor (ISRIB) could partially rescue increased expression of proteins related to cell cycle regulation.

Discussion: Together, these results illustrate the potential for human iPSC-based strategies to reveal biological processes during neurogenesis that may be affected by therapeutic drugs and provide complementary data in relevant human cell types to augment preclinical investigations of drug safety during pregnancy.

暴露于抗逆转录病毒药物多鲁特拉韦会损害人类胚胎皮质发育前脑类器官模型的结构和神经发生。
导言:对于许多治疗药物,包括用于治疗HIV-1感染者(PLWH)的抗逆转录病毒药物,由于获取组织的途径有限以及将怀孕人群纳入临床试验的历史限制,我们几乎没有关于其对发育中人脑潜在影响的数据。人类诱导多能干细胞(iPSCs)为我们提供了一条新途径,让我们可以深入了解药物如何影响代表发育中中枢神经系统的人类细胞类型。为防止艾滋病病毒垂直传播并促进怀孕的艾滋病毒感染者的健康,必须在整个孕期开始和/或维持抗逆转录病毒疗法。然而,许多抗逆转录病毒药物仅在非妊娠人群中进行临床试验后就被批准广泛使用,在对妊娠结果进行评估之前,有关潜在致畸性的信息可能有限。整合酶链转移抑制剂多鲁特拉韦(DTG)是一种一线抗逆转录病毒药物,能有效抑制HIV病毒,但之前有一项研究报告称它与神经管畸形风险的轻微增加有关,但这一情况并未在其他队列中得到证实:为了直接研究 DTG 对人类皮质神经发生的潜在影响,我们在一个基于人类 iPSC 的前脑类器官模型中测量了每日药物暴露对皮质发生早期阶段的影响。我们量化了类器官的大小和结构,分析了基因和蛋白质的表达,以评估几种剂量的DTG对类器官发育的影响:结果:在培养20天或40天后,我们观察到DTG处理的类器官与车辆处理的对照类器官相比存在类器官结构缺陷和神经发生障碍。DTG 的最高剂量(10 μM)导致类器官明显变小,与用药物处理的对照组相比,神经莲座结构的密度降低。从机理上讲,RNA测序和免疫组织学分析表明,DTG处理的器官组织中氨基酸转运失调,综合应激反应被激活;从功能上讲,小分子综合应激反应抑制剂(ISRIB)可部分挽救细胞周期调控相关蛋白表达的增加:总之,这些结果说明了基于人类iPSC的策略在揭示神经发生过程中可能受治疗药物影响的生物过程方面的潜力,并为相关人类细胞类型提供了补充数据,以加强对妊娠期药物安全性的临床前研究。
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来源期刊
CiteScore
5.70
自引率
2.10%
发文量
669
审稿时长
14 weeks
期刊介绍: Frontiers in Molecular Neuroscience is a first-tier electronic journal devoted to identifying key molecules, as well as their functions and interactions, that underlie the structure, design and function of the brain across all levels. The scope of our journal encompasses synaptic and cellular proteins, coding and non-coding RNA, and molecular mechanisms regulating cellular and dendritic RNA translation. In recent years, a plethora of new cellular and synaptic players have been identified from reduced systems, such as neuronal cultures, but the relevance of these molecules in terms of cellular and synaptic function and plasticity in the living brain and its circuits has not been validated. The effects of spine growth and density observed using gene products identified from in vitro work are frequently not reproduced in vivo. Our journal is particularly interested in studies on genetically engineered model organisms (C. elegans, Drosophila, mouse), in which alterations in key molecules underlying cellular and synaptic function and plasticity produce defined anatomical, physiological and behavioral changes. In the mouse, genetic alterations limited to particular neural circuits (olfactory bulb, motor cortex, cortical layers, hippocampal subfields, cerebellum), preferably regulated in time and on demand, are of special interest, as they sidestep potential compensatory developmental effects.
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