Researchers establish fetal brain organoids as a versatile platform for brain cancer modeling.
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onto Animal Models - GEG Tech top picks January 25, 2024 5:33 AM
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Research into brain development, traditionally based on animal models, benefits from the use of 3D brain organoids of human origin. Nevertheless, these organoids present challenges in mimicking the unique features of human brain development, such as complex expansion and differentiation. In a recent study, the generated fetal brain organoids (FeBOs) resembled various aspects of the human fetal brain, including their cellular diversity and transcription profiles. Moreover, the results of the study demonstrate that FeBOs can serve as a versatile platform for modeling brain cancer. Using regularly interspaced short palindromic repeats (CRISPR) editing, mutations associated with brain disorders and cancers were introduced, which then led to observable changes in cellular behavior and drug response. These FeBO mutants, in particular triple knock-out lines, have been used in mutation and drug sensitivity assays, demonstrating the potential of evolutionary and reproducible modeling of brain cancer.