Bioactive and chemically defined hydrogels with tunable stiffness guide cerebral organoid formation and modulate multi-omics plasticity in cerebral organoids

IF 9.4 1区 医学 Q1 ENGINEERING, BIOMEDICAL
Melis Isik , Babatunde O. Okesola , Cemil Can Eylem , Engin Kocak , Emirhan Nemutlu , Matteo D'Este , Alvaro Mata , Burak Derkus
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引用次数: 0

Abstract

Organoids are an emerging technology with great potential in human disease modelling, drug development, diagnosis, tissue engineering, and regenerative medicine. Organoids as 3D-tissue culture systems have gained special attention in the past decades due to their ability to faithfully recapitulate the complexity of organ-specific tissues. Despite considerable successes in culturing physiologically relevant organoids, their real-life applications are currently limited by challenges such as scarcity of an appropriate biomimetic matrix. Peptide amphiphiles (PAs) due to their well-defined chemistry, tunable bioactivity, and extracellular matrix (ECM)-like nanofibrous architecture represent an attractive material scaffold for organoids development. Using cerebral organoids (COs) as exemplar, we demonstrate the possibility to create bio-instructive hydrogels with tunable stiffness ranging from 0.69 kPa to 2.24 kPa to culture and induce COs growth. We used orthogonal chemistry involving oxidative coupling and supramolecular interactions to create two-component hydrogels integrating the bio-instructive activity and ECM-like nanofibrous architecture of a laminin-mimetic PAs (IKVAV-PA) and tunable crosslinking density of hyaluronic acid functionalized with tyramine (HA-Try). Multi-omics technology including transcriptomics, proteomics, and metabolomics reveals the induction and growth of COs in soft HA-Tyr hydrogels containing PA-IKVAV such that the COs display morphology and biomolecular signatures similar to those grown in Matrigel scaffolds. Our materials hold great promise as a safe synthetic ECM for COs induction and growth. Our approach represents a well-defined alternative to animal-derived matrices for the culture of COs and might expand the applicability of organoids in basic and clinical research.

Statement of significance

Synthetic bio-instructive materials which display tissue-specific functionality and nanoscale architecture of the native extracellular matrix are attractive matrices for organoids development. These synthetic matrices are chemically defined and animal-free compared to current gold standard matrices such as Matrigel. Here, we developed hydrogel matrices with tunable stiffness, which incorporate laminin-mimetic peptide amphiphiles to grow and expand cerebral organoids. Using multi-omics tools, the present study provides exciting data on the effects of neuro-inductive cues on the biomolecular profiles of brain organoids.

Abstract Image

具有可调硬度的生物活性和化学定义的水凝胶引导大脑类器官的形成,并调节大脑类器官中的多组学可塑性。
类器官是一种新兴技术,在人类疾病建模、药物开发、诊断、组织工程和再生医学方面具有巨大潜力。类器官作为3D组织培养系统,由于其能够忠实地再现器官特异性组织的复杂性,在过去几十年中受到了特别的关注。尽管在培养生理相关类器官方面取得了相当大的成功,但它们在现实生活中的应用目前受到挑战的限制,例如缺乏合适的仿生基质。肽两亲物(PA)由于其明确的化学性质、可调节的生物活性和细胞外基质(ECM)样纳米纤维结构,代表了类器官开发的一种有吸引力的材料支架。以大脑类器官(CO)为例,我们证明了制造硬度在0.69kPa至2.24kPa范围内可调的生物指导性水凝胶以培养和诱导CO生长的可能性。我们使用涉及氧化偶联和超分子相互作用的正交化学来制备双组分水凝胶,该水凝胶结合了层粘连蛋白模拟PA(IKVAV-PA)的生物指导活性和ECM样纳米纤维结构,以及用酪胺官能化的透明质酸(HA-Try)的可调交联密度。包括转录组学、蛋白质组学和代谢组学在内的多组学技术揭示了在含有PA-IKVAV的软HA-Tyr水凝胶中CO2的诱导和生长,使得CO2显示出与在Matrigel支架中生长的CO2相似的形态和生物分子特征。我们的材料作为一种用于CO2诱导和生长的安全合成ECM具有很大的前景。我们的方法代表了一种明确的替代动物来源基质的COs培养方法,并可能扩大类器官在基础和临床研究中的适用性。意义陈述:显示组织特异性功能和天然细胞外基质纳米级结构的合成生物指导材料是类器官发育的有吸引力的基质。与目前的金标准基质如Matrigel相比,这些合成基质是化学定义的且不含动物。在这里,我们开发了具有可调硬度的水凝胶基质,该基质结合层粘连蛋白模拟肽两亲物来生长和扩展大脑类器官。使用多组学工具,本研究提供了关于神经诱导线索对大脑类器官生物分子图谱影响的令人兴奋的数据。
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来源期刊
Acta Biomaterialia
Acta Biomaterialia 工程技术-材料科学:生物材料
CiteScore
16.80
自引率
3.10%
发文量
776
审稿时长
30 days
期刊介绍: Acta Biomaterialia is a monthly peer-reviewed scientific journal published by Elsevier. The journal was established in January 2005. The editor-in-chief is W.R. Wagner (University of Pittsburgh). The journal covers research in biomaterials science, including the interrelationship of biomaterial structure and function from macroscale to nanoscale. Topical coverage includes biomedical and biocompatible materials.
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