Human IPSC‐Derived PreBötC‐Like Neurons and Development of an Opiate Overdose and Recovery Model

Author:

Guo Xiufang1,Akanda Nesar1,Fiorino Gabriella1,Nimbalkar Siddharth1,Long Christopher J.2,Colón Alisha1,Patel Aakash1,Tighe Patrick J.3,Hickman James J.12ORCID

Affiliation:

1. NanoScience Technology Center University of Central Florida 12424 Research Parkway, Suite 400 Orlando FL 32826 USA

2. Hesperos Inc 12501 Research Parkway, Suite 100 Orlando FL 32826 USA

3. College of Medicine Department of Anesthesiology University of Florida 1600 SW Archer Road Gainesville FL 32610 USA

Abstract

AbstractOpioid overdose is the leading cause of drug overdose lethality, posing an urgent need for investigation. The key brain region for inspiratory rhythm regulation and opioid‐induced respiratory depression (OIRD) is the preBötzinger Complex (preBötC) and current knowledge has mainly been obtained from animal systems. This study aims to establish a protocol to generate human preBötC neurons from induced pluripotent cells (iPSCs) and develop an opioid overdose and recovery model utilizing these iPSC‐preBötC neurons. A de novo protocol to differentiate preBötC‐like neurons from human iPSCs is established. These neurons express essential preBötC markers analyzed by immunocytochemistry and demonstrate expected electrophysiological responses to preBötC modulators analyzed by patch clamp electrophysiology. The correlation of the specific biomarkers and function analysis strongly suggests a preBötC‐like phenotype. Moreover, the dose‐dependent inhibition of these neurons’ activity is demonstrated for four different opioids with identified IC50's comparable to the literature. Inhibition is rescued by naloxone in a concentration‐dependent manner. This iPSC‐preBötC mimic is crucial for investigating OIRD and combating the overdose crisis and a first step for the integration of a functional overdose model into microphysiological systems.

Funder

National Institutes of Health

National Center for Advancing Translational Sciences

Publisher

Wiley

Subject

General Medicine

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