Co-culture of Glutamatergic Neurons and Pediatric High-Grade Glioma Cells Into Microfluidic Devices to Assess Electrical Interactions.


Journal

Journal of visualized experiments : JoVE
ISSN: 1940-087X
Titre abrégé: J Vis Exp
Pays: United States
ID NLM: 101313252

Informations de publication

Date de publication:
17 11 2021
Historique:
entrez: 6 12 2021
pubmed: 7 12 2021
medline: 6 4 2022
Statut: epublish

Résumé

Pediatric high-grade gliomas (pHGG) represent childhood and adolescent brain cancers that carry a rapid dismal prognosis. Since there is a need to overcome the resistance to current treatments and find a new way of cure, modeling the disease as close as possible in an in vitro setting to test new drugs and therapeutic procedures is highly demanding. Studying their fundamental pathobiological processes, including glutamatergic neuron hyperexcitability, will be a real advance in understanding interactions between the environmental brain and pHGG cells. Therefore, to recreate neurons/pHGG cell interactions, this work shows the development of a functional in vitro model co-culturing human-induced Pluripotent Stem (hiPS)-derived cortical glutamatergic neurons pHGG cells into compartmentalized microfluidic devices and a process to record their electrophysiological modifications. The first step was to differentiate and characterize human glutamatergic neurons. Secondly, the cells were cultured in microfluidic devices with pHGG derived cell lines. Brain microenvironment and neuronal activity were then included in this model to analyze the electrical impact of pHGG cells on these micro-environmental neurons. Electrophysiological recordings are coupled using multielectrode arrays (MEA) to these microfluidic devices to mimic physiological conditions and to record the electrical activity of the entire neural network. A significant increase in neuron excitability was underlined in the presence of tumor cells.

Identifiants

pubmed: 34866620
doi: 10.3791/62748
doi:

Types de publication

Journal Article Research Support, Non-U.S. Gov't Video-Audio Media

Langues

eng

Sous-ensembles de citation

IM

Auteurs

Quentin Fuchs (Q)

Team Tumoral signaling and therapeutic targets, UMR CNRS 7021 - Laboratory of Bioimaging and Pathologies.

Melissa Messe (M)

Team Tumoral signaling and therapeutic targets, UMR CNRS 7021 - Laboratory of Bioimaging and Pathologies.

Marina Pierrevelcin (M)

Team Tumoral signaling and therapeutic targets, UMR CNRS 7021 - Laboratory of Bioimaging and Pathologies.

Benoit Lhermitte (B)

Team Tumoral signaling and therapeutic targets, UMR CNRS 7021 - Laboratory of Bioimaging and Pathologies; Centre de Ressources Biologiques, Pathology department, University Hospital of Strasbourg.

Monique Dontenwill (M)

Team Tumoral signaling and therapeutic targets, UMR CNRS 7021 - Laboratory of Bioimaging and Pathologies.

Natacha Entz-Werlé (N)

Team Tumoral signaling and therapeutic targets, UMR CNRS 7021 - Laboratory of Bioimaging and Pathologies; Pediatric Oncohematology unit, University Hospital of Strasbourg; Natacha.entz-werle@chru-strasbourg.fr.

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