European Journal of Case Reports and Clinical Images
Researchers have developed a new method
that enables high-throughput screening of Huntingtons disease organoids.
Researchers from Rockefeller
University, US, have designed a novel generic phenotypic screening method at
the organoid level. Through this new method, the team discovered modulators of
phenotypes of Huntingtons disease, which could potentially be used
therapeutically. The study was recently published in Cell Reports Methods.
While organoids are promising tools for
modelling complex disease phenotypes, they often lack reproducibility and
scalability in their use of high-throughput screening assays. The
researchers therefore aimed to develop a method of using reproducible and
scalable micropatterned neural organoids for drug screening and to identify
targets that could rescue developmental phenotypes in organoids derived from
stem cells that carry mutations for Huntingtons disease.
In their report, the scientists explain
that although Huntingtons is a degenerative disease, it has recently been shown
to alter human neurodevelopment in human foetal samples. This therefore
suggests that early human organoid models that reproduce aberrant signalling
and morphogenesis in Huntingtons establish a promising approach for discovering
new mechanisms that are also relevant at later stages of the disease. To create
organoids mimicking the ectodermal compartment during human neurulation, the
researchers leveraged neuruloids that use micropattern-based differentiation,
with the possibility for easy upscaling while retaining excellent
reproducibility.
The team then performed a drug
discovery screen aimed at reversing a complex phenotype previously reported for
Huntingtons in the neuruloids, using a previously characterised isogenic series
of human embryonic stem cell lines with graded increases in CAG lengths, which
is a known cause of the neurodegenerative disease.
Finally, the team developed a
deep-learning computational pipeline to analyse the screening results and to
quantify, for each compound, its efficacy at reversing the disease phenotype
back to normal as well as its adverse effects. According to the report, this
combination of tools allowed the researchers to find that those specific
bromodomain inhibitors can efficiently revert Huntingtons phenotypes to wild
type and alleviate neuronal susceptibility to apoptosis in human Huntingtons
neurons in vitro, highlighting a potential new druggable target the condition
that should be further evaluated.
This study lays the groundwork for combining deep neural network and bioengineered human microtissues to carry out drug screens on neural organoids. This is achieved by the combination of a highly reproducible, scalable organoid platform allowing the easy generation of large image databanks required for leveraging the power of data analysis schemes based on deep neural networks, the researchers conclude in their paper.