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Bioengineering of propioceptor and intrafusal muscle composite tissue

$640,169ZIAFY2025TRNIH

National Center For Advancing Translational Sciences

Investigators

Abstract

Sensory neurons and intrafusal muscle fibers are crucial for muscle tone, movement coordination, and fine motor control through mechanotransduction processes. This study aims to develop an in vitro model of sensory neurons and intrafusal muscle composite tissue to replicate sensory neuron-skeletal muscle interactions. We will first optimize the integration of sensory neurons and skeletal muscle in a 2D co-culture system, demonstrating the successful integration of sensory neurons onto muscle fibers. Based on the optimized co-culture medium, we will then develop a 3D tissue model by refining hydrogel formulations and adjusting fabrication parameters. To achieve precise spatial control, the sensory neurons-containing hydrogel will be embedded into the engineered muscle tissue, mimicking intrafusal muscle structures. The model will be validated through assessments of cytocompatibility, calcium imaging, and electrophysiological recordings. We anticipate establishing optimized co-culture conditions and developing the functional 3D tissue model with successfully integrated proprioceptors and intrafusal muscle cells. Validation studies will provide insights into the effects of local anesthetics, confirming the model’s utility for neuromuscular toxicity assessments. This research will advance the development of accurate in vitro models for studying neuromuscular interactions, facilitating therapeutic compound screening, and improving our understanding of local anesthetic toxicity, thereby contributing to safer clinical practices and innovative treatments. The primary focus of SCTL scientists in the past year has been to utilize rigorous and efficient iPSC differentiation protocols for a variety of cell types relevant for both disease modeling and cell therapy applications, hypothalamic arcuate neurons (e.g., T2D), nociceptors (e.g., pain research), cortical neurons (e.g., Tay Sachs disease), astrocytes (e.g., free sialic acid storage disease), insulin-producing cells (e.g., type 1 diabetes), hepatocytes (e.g., liver failure), trophectoderm (e.g., placental development), cerebellar organoids (e.g., Friedreich’s ataxia), and dorsal root ganglion organoids (e.g., chemotherapy induced peripheral neuropathy). In FY25, our lab published six manuscripts. One manuscript demonstrates the effects of satellite glia on iPSC-derived sensory neuron differentiation and maturation. The second manuscript demonstrates the translational application of iPSC-derived hypothalamic arcuate neurons for the identification of environmental compounds that may trigger early female puberty. The third manuscript demonstrates a highly efficient protocol for the generation of iPSC-derived trophoblast. The fourth manuscript establishing a scalable differentiation platform for the generation of hypothalamic arcuate neurons from iPSCs. The fifth manuscript is a review article in collaboration with the international stakeholders on the promotion of best practices for stem cell research. The sixth manuscript establishes a protocol for the generation of cerebellar organoids and their application in Friedreich’s ataxia disease modeling. In this collaboration, the SCTL evaluated various 2D and 3D cell culturing conditions to identify parameters that support the generation of 3D neuromuscular composites for use in disease modeling, as well as drug and therapeutic development. Ongoing Collaborations: 1) Shuibing Chen (Cornell University): Multi-omic characterization of type 2 diabetes patient iPSC-derived cell types collaboration between NCATS, NHGRI, Cornell and Columbia 2) Claudia Doege (Columbia University): Multi-omic characterization of type 2 diabetes patient iPSC-derived cell types collaboration between NCATS, NHGRI, Cornell and Columbia 3) Lauretta Lacko (Cornell University): Multi-omic characterization of type 2 diabetes patient iPSC-derived cell types collaboration between NCATS, NHGRI, Cornell and Columbia 4) Robert Schwartz (Cornell University): Multi-omic characterization of type 2 diabetes patient iPSC-derived cell types collaboration between NCATS, NHGRI, Cornell and Columbia 5) Ronald Khan (Harvard University): Multi-omic characterization of type 2 diabetes patient iPSC-derived cell types collaboration between NCATS, NHGRI, Cornell and Columbia 6) Stephan Parker (University of Michigan): Multi-omic characterization of type 2 diabetes patient iPSC-derived cell types collaboration between NCATS, NHGRI, Cornell and Columbia 7) Fei Wang (Cornell University): Multi-omic characterization of type 2 diabetes patient iPSC-derived cell types collaboration between NCATS, NHGRI, Cornell and Columbia 8) Leslie Thompson (University of California, Irvine): Huntington’s disease modeling using functional genomics and hPSC-derived astrocytes 9) Daniel Paull (New York Stem Cell Foundation): Role of TCF7L2 in beta cell differentiation and function using iPSCs collaboration between NCATS, NHGRI and NYSCF. 10) Thomas Kent (Texas A&M University): Pleiotropic oxidized carbon nanozymes as new therapeutics for Friedreich’s ataxia treatment 11) Sang Jin Lee (Wake Forest Institute of Regenerative Medicine): Generation of human 3D skeletal muscle composite to study muscle pathophysiology 12) David Bennett (University of Oxford): Transcriptomic analysis of diabetic peripheral neuropathy patient iPSC-derived cell types 13) Anna Moreno (Navega Therapeutics): Testing a Reversible Gene Editing Method for Analgesia using iPSC-derived Sensory Neurons 14) Rosalind Segal (Harvard University): Studies of Chemotherapy Induced Peripheral Neuropathy (CIPN) in iPSC derived peripheral sensory neurons 15) Martin Schneider (University of Maryland Baltimore): Electrophysiological characterization of iPSC-derived neural cell types 16) Clifford Woolf (Harvard): Characterization of iPSC-derived nociceptors Collaboration between SCTL and Harvard 17) Bruce Bean (Harvard University): Characterization of iPSC-derived nociceptors Collaboration between SCTL and Harvard 18) Erick Hernandez-Ochoa (University of Maryland Baltimore): Electrophysiological characterization of iPSC-derived neural cell types 19) Jun-Ho La (University of Texas Medical Branch): Role of GPR37 in pain memory erasure in iPSC-derived sensory neurons. 20) Laura Pollard (Greenwood Genetic Center): Preclinical development of potential gene editing therapy for Free Sialic Acid Storage Disorder collaboration between NCATS and the FSASD Consortium 21) Richard Steet (Greenwood Genetic Center): Preclinical development of potential gene editing therapy for Free Sialic Acid Storage Disorder collaboration between NCATS and the FSASD Consortium 22) Raymond Wang (Children’s Hospital of Orange County): Preclinical development of potential gene editing therapy for Free Sialic Acid Storage Disorder collaboration between NCATS and the FSASD Consortium 23) Monkol Lek (Yale University): Preclinical development of potential gene editing therapy for Free Sialic Acid Storage Disorder collaboration between NCATS and the FSASD Consortium 24) Kostantin Dobrenis (Albert Einstein College of Medicine): Preclinical development of potential gene editing therapy for Free Sialic Acid Storage Disorder collaboration between NCATS and the FSASD Consortium 25) Steven Walkley (Albert Einstein College of Medicine): Preclinical development of potential gene editing therapy for Free Sialic Acid Storage Disorder collaboration between NCATS and the FSASD Consortium 26) Christine Anne-Longin (University of Paris): Preclinical development of potential gene editing therapy for Free Sialic Acid Storage Disorder collaboration between NCATS and the FSASD Consortium 27) Bruno Gasnier (University of Paris): Preclinical development of potential gene editing therapy for Free Sialic Acid Storage Disorder collaboration between NCATS and the FSASD Consortium 28) Ross Marklein (Federal Drug Administration): Development of a platform for manufacturing iPSC-derived mesenchymal stromal cells producing extracellular vesicles for neurodegenerative disease

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