Cerebral Organoid Arrays for Batch Phenotypic Analysis in Sections and Three Dimensions

Author:

Chen Juan1,Ma Haihua1,Deng Zhiyu2,Luo Qingming2ORCID,Gong Hui13,Long Ben23,Li Xiangning23

Affiliation:

1. Britton Chance Center for Biomedical Photonics, Wuhan National Laboratory for Optoelectronics, Huazhong University of Science and Technology, Wuhan 430074, China

2. Key Laboratory of Biomedical Engineering of Hainan Province, School of Biomedical Engineering, Hainan University, Haikou 570228, China

3. HUST-Suzhou Institute for Brainsmatics, Jiangsu Industrial Technology Research Institute, Suzhou 215125, China

Abstract

Organoids can recapitulate human-specific phenotypes and functions in vivo and have great potential for research in development, disease modeling, and drug screening. Due to the inherent variability among organoids, experiments often require a large sample size. Embedding, staining, and imaging each organoid individually require a lot of reagents and time. Hence, there is an urgent need for fast and efficient methods for analyzing the phenotypic changes in organoids in batches. Here, we provide a comprehensive strategy for array embedding, staining, and imaging of cerebral organoids in both agarose sections and in 3D to analyze the spatial distribution of biomarkers in organoids in situ. We constructed several disease models, particularly an aging model, as examples to demonstrate our strategy for the investigation of the phenotypic analysis of organoids. We fabricated an array mold to produce agarose support with microwells, which hold organoids in place for live/dead imaging. We performed staining and imaging of sectioned organoids embedded in agarose and 3D imaging to examine phenotypic changes in organoids using fluorescence micro-optical sectioning tomography (fMOST) and whole-mount immunostaining. Parallel studies of organoids in arrays using the same staining and imaging parameters enabled easy and reliable comparison among different groups. We were able to track all the data points obtained from every organoid in an embedded array. This strategy could help us study the phenotypic changes in organoids in disease models and drug screening.

Funder

STI2030-Major Projects

National Natural Science Foundation of China

Hainan Provincial Natural Science Foundation of China

the China Postdoctoral Science Foundation

Publisher

MDPI AG

Subject

Inorganic Chemistry,Organic Chemistry,Physical and Theoretical Chemistry,Computer Science Applications,Spectroscopy,Molecular Biology,General Medicine,Catalysis

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