ePoster

NAKED ORGANOIDS: EXPOSING NEURONAL MICROCIRCUITS OF HUMAN MIDBRAIN ORGANOIDS DERIVED FROM PARKINSON’S DISEASE PATIENTS

Diego Lopez-Pigozziand 6 co-authors

VIMM

FENS Forum 2026 (2026)
Barcelona, Spain
Board PS03-08AM-370

Presentation

Date TBA

Board: PS03-08AM-370

Poster preview

NAKED ORGANOIDS: EXPOSING NEURONAL MICROCIRCUITS OF HUMAN MIDBRAIN ORGANOIDS DERIVED FROM PARKINSON’S DISEASE PATIENTS poster preview

Event Information

Poster Board

PS03-08AM-370

Abstract

The study of early human neurodevelopment has remained an elusive topic due to obvious ethical barriers. Nowadays, stem cell technologies have reached a milestone by organoids, which self-assemble into 3D structures that mimic the complexity and functionality of different brain regions. Here we were able to characterize human midbrain organoids (hMOs) during their development at both single cell and network levels using a combination of electrophysiology and fluorescence optical microscopy. Current injections in patched cells (n=181) evoked different firing patterns: from single spike to tonic firing up to 24 Hz frequency. Cell populations were separated into clusters through unsupervised principal components analysis (PCA) based on their electrophysiological parameters (Fig. 1A). The dopaminergic phenotype extracted by PCA was validated by filling some cells with a fluorescent dextran during patch clamp recordings (Fig. 1B). The onset of a synchronized oscillatory activity was observed in hMOs around 60-90 days using multielectrode arrays (MEAs) and Ca2+ multiphoton imaging (Fig. 1C). Light-sheet microscopy of TH in the clarified organoids (Fig. 1D), permitted us to reconstruct in 3D the dopaminergic neuronal network and correlate the oscillatory activity frequency to a critical cell density around 103 neurons/mm3 (Fig. 1E). hMOs derived from patients with Parkinson’s disease presented an impairment in the formation of the oscillatory activity together with reduced number of dopaminergic neurons. These results support the notion of hMOs as a suitable model for investigating neurodegeneration using Parkinson’s disease patient-derived stem cells.

Panel A shows 4 different firing patterns for the cell closer to the centroid of the principal component analysis. The first cluster is identified as putative dopaminergic. Panel B shows a cell filled with a fluorophore and the positive immunostaining against TH marker with a tonic firing evoked firing rate. Panel C shows in white the segmentation of cells. The fluorescence over time of those marked on red are shown below and synchronized activity is highlighted. Panel D shows an organoid before and after clearing and therefore becoming transparent plus an image of the TH marker for a certain plane of acquisition in the light-sheet microscope. Panel E is a scatter plot of TH density against Network frequency with a regression model line to fit the data. There is a critical density from which organoids start to develop synchronized activity.

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