DIRECT PATHWAY BIAS AND ALTERED STRIATAL NEUROGENESIS IN HUMAN IPSC MODELS OF 16P11.2 CNVS: EVIDENCE FROM SINGLE-CELL AND FUNCTIONAL ANALYSES
Cardiff University
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Poster Board
PS03-08AM-455
Poster
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We generated high-fidelity human iPSC-derived MSNs using an Activin A patterning strategy and benchmarked their developmental trajectories against human foetal and adult striatal single-cell atlases. We then modelled 16p11.2 copy number variants (CNVs) – duplications and deletions that confer risk for autism spectrum disorder, schizophrenia, intellectual disability, and related NDDs – using iPSCs from CNV carriers. Single-cell RNA sequencing across differentiation stages was integrated with cell-cycle and lineage marker assays, and MSN network function was assessed using calcium imaging and pharmacological modulation of direct-pathway signalling.
Both 16p11.2 duplications and deletions produced reciprocal shifts in neurogenesis kinetics and progenitor proliferation yet converged on a shared bias toward dMSN fate. This transcriptional reprogramming was evident across progenitors and MSN precursor states. CNV MSNs exhibited altered calcium dynamics and heightened responsiveness to direct-pathway stimulation, consistent with increased excitability within dMSN-enriched networks.
Our findings identify dMSN enrichment as a convergent cellular phenotype of opposing 16p11.2 CNVs, linking early developmental perturbations to functional changes in striatal circuitry. This work highlights MSNs as a key, underappreciated substrate for NDD pathogenesis and supports iPSC-derived striatal models as a platform for mechanism-led target discovery and therapeutic screening aimed at restoring pathway balance and excitability.
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