16 January 2025, 14:30
Understanding brain development and regeneration with single cell technologies
AbstractThe brain is a highly complex and fascinating organ and we are interested in understanding how cellular heterogeneity emerges during brain development and how brain cells can regenerate upon injury We are tackling these questions by applying and further developing integrative multi modal single cell technologies In the first part of my talk I will present our work on human pluripotent... AbstractThe brain is a highly complex and fascinating organ and we are interested in understanding how cellular heterogeneity emerges during brain development and how brain cells can regenerate upon injury. We are tackling these questions by applying and further developing integrative, multi-modal single-cell technologies. In the first part of my talk, I will present our work on human pluripotent stem cell (PSC) derived organoids that model human brain development in vitro. We generated a data set of paired single-cell transcriptome and accessible chromatin profiling over a dense time course of human brain organoid development, which we utilized to infer a gene regulatory network of human brain organoid development. We then used pooled genetic perturbation with single-cell transcriptome readout to assess transcription factor requirement for cell fate and state...
Speaker(s): Barbara Treutlein, ETH, Zurich, Switzerland
Host: Hanh Vu
Place: Large Operon
External Faculty Speaker
EMBL Heidelberg
Additional information
Abstract
The brain is a highly complex and fascinating organ and we are interested in understanding how cellular heterogeneity emerges during brain development and how brain cells can regenerate upon injury. We are tackling these questions by applying and further developing integrative, multi-modal single-cell technologies.
In the first part of my talk, I will present our work on human pluripotent stem cell (PSC) derived organoids that model human brain development in vitro. We generated a data set of paired single-cell transcriptome and accessible chromatin profiling over a dense time course of human brain organoid development, which we utilized to infer a gene regulatory network of human brain organoid development. We then used pooled genetic perturbation with single-cell transcriptome readout to assess transcription factor requirement for cell fate and state regulation in organoid and identified an important role of GLI3 during human telencephalon dorso-ventral patterning. Further, we have developed single-cell methodologies to directly track developmental lineages in brain organoids and could identify clonality of brain organoid regions as well as a temporal window of regional fate specification. Finally, we are working towards engineering diverse human neuronal populations in vitro using morphogen screening approaches.
In the second part of my talk, I will present our work on understanding the organization and regeneration of the telencephalon in the axolotl salamander using single-cell genomics. We first generated a single-cell multiomic atlas of the axolotl telencephalon, identified evolutionary conservation of neuronal cell types and reconstructed trajectories of post-embryonic neurogenesis. We then showed that upon major injury, all neuronal cell types reemerge through regenerative neurogenesis and neuronal projections to other brain regions are re-established. Finally, we identified a regeneration specific state of neural progenitor cells that is characterized by expression of wound healing genes.
Together, our work highlights the power of single-cell technologies to understand the gene regulatory logic underlying brain development and regeneration.