EMBO Molecular Medicine (Mar 2024)

Organotypic culture of human brain explants as a preclinical model for AI-driven antiviral studies

  • Emma Partiot,
  • Barbara Gorda,
  • Willy Lutz,
  • Solène Lebrun,
  • Pierre Khalfi,
  • Stéphan Mora,
  • Benoit Charlot,
  • Karim Majzoub,
  • Solange Desagher,
  • Gowrishankar Ganesh,
  • Sophie Colomb,
  • Raphael Gaudin

DOI
https://doi.org/10.1038/s44321-024-00039-9
Journal volume & issue
Vol. 16, no. 4
pp. 1004 – 1026

Abstract

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Abstract Viral neuroinfections represent a major health burden for which the development of antivirals is needed. Antiviral compounds that target the consequences of a brain infection (symptomatic treatment) rather than the cause (direct-acting antivirals) constitute a promising mitigation strategy that requires to be investigated in relevant models. However, physiological surrogates mimicking an adult human cortex are lacking, limiting our understanding of the mechanisms associated with viro-induced neurological disorders. Here, we optimized the Organotypic culture of Post-mortem Adult human cortical Brain explants (OPAB) as a preclinical platform for Artificial Intelligence (AI)-driven antiviral studies. OPAB shows robust viability over weeks, well-preserved 3D cytoarchitecture, viral permissiveness, and spontaneous local field potential (LFP). Using LFP as a surrogate for neurohealth, we developed a machine learning framework to predict with high confidence the infection status of OPAB. As a proof-of-concept, we showed that antiviral-treated OPAB could partially restore LFP-based electrical activity of infected OPAB in a donor-dependent manner. Together, we propose OPAB as a physiologically relevant and versatile model to study neuroinfections and beyond, providing a platform for preclinical drug discovery.

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