Bottom-up synthetic embryology for understanding early human development
ORAL · Invited
Abstract
Early human development remains mysterious and very difficult to study. Recent advances in mammalian embryology, stem cell biology, organoid technology, and bioengineering have contributed to a significant interest in bottom-up, synthetic stem cell-derived models of human development (or embryoids). The controllability and reproducibility of human embryoids coupled with the ease of genetically modifying stem cell lines, the ability to manipulate culture conditions and the simplicity of live imaging make them robust and attractive systems to disentangle cellular behaviors and signaling interactions that drive human embryogenesis. In this talk, I will describe our effort in using human pluripotent stem cells (hPSCs) to develop tractable experimental models of the peri-implantation embryonic development and neurulation. The peri-implantation human embryoids developed by us recapitulate key early post-implantation developmental landmarks successively, including pro-amniotic cavity formation, amniotic ectoderm-epiblast patterning, primordial germ cell specification, and development of the primitive streak with controlled anteroposterior polarity. I will further discuss an hPSC-based neuroectoderm patterning model to recapitulate the formation of the neural plate and another more recently developed, patterned neural tube model with fully defined anterior-posterior and dorsal-ventral axes.
*Our research is supported by the Michigan-Cambridge Collaboration Initiative, the University of Michigan Mcubed Fund, the 21st Century Jobs Trust Fund received through the Michigan Strategic Fund from the State of Michigan (Grant CASE-315037), the National Institutes of Health (R21 NS113518, R21 HD100931, R21 HD105126, and R01 GM143297), and the National Science Foundation (CMMI 1917304, CBET 1901718, and NSF I-Corps 2112458).
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Presenters
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Jianping Fu
- University of Michigan, Ann Arbor