Acta Neuropathologica Communications (May 2024)

Human post-mortem organotypic brain slice cultures: a tool to study pathomechanisms and test therapies

  • Bonnie C. Plug,
  • Ilma M. Revers,
  • Marjolein Breur,
  • Gema Muñoz González,
  • Jaap A. Timmerman,
  • Niels R.C. Meijns,
  • Daniek Hamberg,
  • Jikke Wagendorp,
  • Erik Nutma,
  • Nicole I. Wolf,
  • Antonio Luchicchi,
  • Huibert D. Mansvelder,
  • Niek P. van Til,
  • Marjo S. van der Knaap,
  • Marianna Bugiani

DOI
https://doi.org/10.1186/s40478-024-01784-1
Journal volume & issue
Vol. 12, no. 1
pp. 1 – 17

Abstract

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Abstract Human brain experimental models recapitulating age- and disease-related characteristics are lacking. There is urgent need for human-specific tools that model the complex molecular and cellular interplay between different cell types to assess underlying disease mechanisms and test therapies. Here we present an adapted ex vivo organotypic slice culture method using human post-mortem brain tissue cultured at an air-liquid interface to also study brain white matter. We assessed whether these human post-mortem brain slices recapitulate the in vivo neuropathology and if they are suitable for pathophysiological, experimental and pre-clinical treatment development purposes, specifically regarding leukodystrophies. Human post-mortem brain tissue and cerebrospinal fluid were obtained from control, psychiatric and leukodystrophy donors. Slices were cultured up to six weeks, in culture medium with or without human cerebrospinal fluid. Human post-mortem organotypic brain slice cultures remained viable for at least six weeks ex vivo and maintained tissue structure and diversity of (neural) cell types. Supplementation with cerebrospinal fluid could improve slice recovery. Patient-derived organotypic slice cultures recapitulated and maintained known in vivo neuropathology. The cultures also showed physiologic multicellular responses to lysolecithin-induced demyelination ex vivo, indicating their suitability to study intrinsic repair mechanisms upon injury. The slice cultures were applicable for various experimental studies, as multi-electrode neuronal recordings. Finally, the cultures showed successful cell-type dependent transduction with gene therapy vectors. These human post-mortem organotypic brain slice cultures represent an adapted ex vivo model suitable for multifaceted studies of brain disease mechanisms, boosting translation from human ex vivo to in vivo. This model also allows for assessing potential treatment options, including gene therapy applications. Human post-mortem brain slice cultures are thus a valuable tool in preclinical research to study the pathomechanisms of a wide variety of brain diseases in living human tissue.

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