Atypical neurogenesis in induced pluripotent stem cell (iPSC) from autistic individuals

Author:

Adhya DwaipayanORCID,Swarup Vivek,Nagy Roland,Dutan Lucia,Shum Carole,Valencia-Alarcón Eva P.,Jozwik Kamila Maria,Mendez Maria Andreina,Horder Jamie,Loth Eva,Nowosiad Paulina,Lee Irene,Skuse David,Flinter Frances A.,Murphy Declan,McAlonan Grainne,Geschwind Daniel H.,Price Jack,Carroll Jason,Srivastava Deepak P.ORCID,Baron-Cohen Simon

Abstract

AbstractBackgroundAutism is a heterogenous collection of disorders with a complex molecular underpinning. Evidence from post-mortem brain studies using adult brains have indicated that early prenatal development may be altered in autism. Induced pluripotent stem cells (iPSCs) generated from autistic individuals with macrocephaly also indicate prenatal development as a critical period for this condition. But little is known about early altered cellular events during prenatal stages in autism.MethodsIPSCs were generated from 9 unrelated autistic individuals without macrocephaly and with heterogeneous genetic backgrounds, and 6 typically developing, control, individuals. IPSCs were differentiated towards either cortical or midbrain fates. Gene expression and high throughput cellular phenotyping was used to characterise iPSCs at different stage of differentiation.ResultsA subset of autism-iPSC cortical neurons were RNA-sequenced to reveal autism-specific signatures similar to post-mortem brain studies, indicating a potential common biological mechanism. Autism-iPSCs differentiated towards a cortical fate displayed impairments in the ability to self-form into neural rosettes. In addition, autism-iPSCs demonstrated significant differences in rate of cell type assignment of cortical precursors, and dorsal and ventral forebrain precursors. These cellular phenotypes occurred in the absence of alterations in cell proliferation during cortical differentiation, differing from previous studies. Acquisition of cell fate during midbrain differentiation was not different between control- and autism-iPSCs.ConclusionsTaken together, our data indicate that autism-iPSCs diverge from control-iPSCs at a cellular level during early stage of neurodevelopment. This suggests that unique developmental differences associated with autism may be established at early prenatal stages.

Publisher

Cold Spring Harbor Laboratory

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