AI Article Synopsis

  • The study focuses on creating human ascending somatosensory assembloids (hASA) from pluripotent stem cells to model the human spinothalamic pathway, which is crucial for transmitting pain and sensory information to the brain.
  • Researchers confirmed the presence of important cell types in the hASA using transcriptomic profiling and demonstrated connections between sensory neurons and thalamic neurons through rabies tracing and calcium imaging.
  • Experiments showed that chemical stimulation led to coordinated neuronal responses, and the disruption of the sodium channel SCN9A, associated with pain insensitivity, affected the synchrony of the network, highlighting the potential of this model for understanding sensory pathways and developing pain therapies

Article Abstract

The ascending somatosensory pathways convey crucial information about pain, touch, itch, and body part movement from peripheral organs to the central nervous system. Despite a significant need for effective therapeutics modulating pain and other somatosensory modalities, clinical translation remains challenging, which is likely related to species-specific features and the lack of in vitro models to directly probe and manipulate this polysynaptic pathway. Here, we established human ascending somatosensory assembloids (hASA)- a four-part assembloid completely generated from human pluripotent stem cells that integrates somatosensory, spinal, diencephalic, and cortical organoids to model the human ascending spinothalamic pathway. Transcriptomic profiling confirmed the presence of key cell types in this circuit. Rabies tracing and calcium imaging showed that sensory neurons connected with dorsal spinal cord projection neurons, which ascending axons further connected to thalamic neurons. Following noxious chemical stimulation, single neuron calcium imaging of intact hASA demonstrated coordinated response, while four-part concomitant extracellular recordings and calcium imaging revealed synchronized activity across the assembloid. Loss of the sodium channel SCN9A, which causes pain insensitivity in humans, disrupted synchrony across the four-part hASA. Taken together, these experiments demonstrate the ability to functionally assemble the essential components of the human sensory pathway. These findings could both accelerate our understanding of human sensory circuits and facilitate therapeutic development.

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Source
http://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pmc/articles/PMC10979925PMC
http://dx.doi.org/10.1101/2024.03.11.584539DOI Listing

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