Publication

Protosequences in human cortical organoids model intrinsic states in the developing cortex

December 30, 2023
ActivityScan Assay
Burst Detection
Computational Modeling
Custom Analysis
Functional Phenotyping
MEA Metrics
MaxOne
MaxOne Chip
MaxOne Perfusion System
Spike Sorting
Neuronal Cell Cultures
Organoids
Brain Slices
Tjitse van der Molen, Alex Spaeth, Mattia Chini, Julian Bartram, Aditya Dendukuri, Zongren Zhang, Kiran Bhaskaran-Nair, Lon J. Blauvelt, Linda R. Petzold, Paul K. Hansma, Mircea Teodorescu, Andreas Hierlemann, Keith B. Hengen, Ileana L. Hanganu-Opatz, Kenneth S. Kosik, Tal Sharf
Download Resource
Access Resource
Back

Abstract

Details

Neuronal firing sequences are thought to be the basic building blocks of neural coding and information broadcasting within the brain. However, when sequences emerge during neurodevelopment remains unknown. We demonstrate that structured firing sequences are present in spontaneous activity of human brain organoids and ex vivo neonatal brain slices from the murine somatosensory cortex. We observed a balance between temporally rigid and flexible firing patterns that are emergent phenomena in human brain organoids and early postnatal murine somatosensory cortex, but not in primary dissociated cortical cultures. Our findings suggest that temporal sequences do not arise in an experience-dependent manner, but are rather constrained by an innate preconfigured architecture established during neurogenesis. These findings highlight the potential for brain organoids to further explore how exogenous inputs can be used to refine neuronal circuits and enable new studies into the genetic mechanisms that govern assembly of functional circuitry during early human brain development.