Protocol for Human Blastoids Modeling Blastocyst Development and Implantation

A model of the human blastocyst formed from stem cells (blastoid) would support scientific and medical advances. However, its predictive power will depend on its ability to efficiently, timely, and faithfully recapitulate the sequences of blastocyst development (morphogenesis, specification, pattern...

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Published inJournal of visualized experiments no. 186
Main Authors Kagawa, Harunobu, Javali, Alok, Heidari Khoei, Heidar, Sommer, Theresa Maria, Sestini, Giovanni, Novatchkova, Maria, Scholte Op Reimer, Yvonne, Rivron, Nicolas
Format Journal Article
LanguageEnglish
Published United States 10.08.2022
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Summary:A model of the human blastocyst formed from stem cells (blastoid) would support scientific and medical advances. However, its predictive power will depend on its ability to efficiently, timely, and faithfully recapitulate the sequences of blastocyst development (morphogenesis, specification, patterning), and to form cells reflecting the blastocyst stage. Here we show that naïve human pluripotent stem cells cultured in PXGL conditions and then triply inhibited for the Hippo, transforming growth factor- β, and extracellular signal-regulated kinase pathways efficiently undergo morphogenesis to form blastoids (>70%). Matching with developmental timing (~4 days), blastoids unroll the blastocyst sequence of specification by producing analogs of the trophoblast and epiblast, followed by the formation of analogs of the primitive endoderm and the polar trophoblasts. This results in the formation of cells transcriptionally similar to the blastocyst (>96%) and a minority of post-implantation analogs. Blastoids efficiently pattern by forming the embryonic-abembryonic axis marked by the maturation of the polar region (NR2F2+), which acquires the specific potential to directionally attach to hormonally stimulated endometrial cells, as in utero. Such a human blastoid is a scalable, versatile, and ethical model to study human development and implantation in vitro.
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ISSN:1940-087X
1940-087X
DOI:10.3791/63388