Advancing preclinical models of psychiatric disorders with human brain organoid cultures.

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Publication Year:
2022
Authors:
PubMed ID:
35948659
Public Summary:
This review analyses and discusses the up-to-date scientific literature on how neurons grown in laboratory settings are used to find new treatments for mental health disorders. These methods are compared with popular animal models, and a particular focus is placed on neurons grown in three-dimensional (3D) formats.
Scientific Abstract:
Psychiatric disorders are often distinguished from neurological disorders in that the former do not have characteristic lesions or findings from cerebrospinal fluid, electroencephalograms (EEGs), or brain imaging, and furthermore do not have commonly recognized convergent mechanisms. Psychiatric disorders commonly involve clinical diagnosis of phenotypic behavioral disturbances of mood and psychosis, often with a poorly understood contribution of environmental factors. As such, psychiatric disease has been challenging to model preclinically for mechanistic understanding and pharmaceutical development. This review compares commonly used animal paradigms of preclinical testing with evolving techniques of induced pluripotent cell culture with a focus on emerging three-dimensional models. Advances in complexity of 3D cultures, recapitulating electrical activity in utero, and disease modeling of psychosis, mood, and environmentally induced disorders are reviewed. Insights from these rapidly expanding technologies are discussed as they pertain to the utility of human organoid and other models in finding novel research directions, validating pharmaceutical action, and recapitulating human disease.