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If Human Brain Organoids Are the Answer to Understanding Dementia, What Are the Questions?

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journal contribution
posted on 2024-06-19, 09:29 authored by L Ooi, M Dottori, AL Cook, M Engel, V Gautam, A Grubman, Damian Hernandez, AE King, S Maksour, H Targa Dias Anastacio, R Balez, A Pébay, C Pouton, M Valenzuela, A White, R Williamson
Because our beliefs regarding our individuality, autonomy, and personhood are intimately bound up with our brains, there is a public fascination with cerebral organoids, the “mini-brain,” the “brain in a dish”. At the same time, the ethical issues around organoids are only now being explored. What are the prospects of using human cerebral organoids to better understand, treat, or prevent dementia? Will human organoids represent an improvement on the current, less-than-satisfactory, animal models? When considering these questions, two major issues arise. One is the general challenge associated with using any stem cell–generated preparation for in vitro modelling (challenges amplified when using organoids compared with simpler cell culture systems). The other relates to complexities associated with defining and understanding what we mean by the term “dementia.” We discuss 10 puzzles, issues, and stumbling blocks to watch for in the quest to model “dementia in a dish.”

History

Journal

Neuroscientist

Volume

26

Article number

ARTN 1073858420912404

Pagination

438-454

Location

United States

Open access

  • Yes

ISSN

1073-8584

eISSN

1089-4098

Language

English

Publication classification

C1 Refereed article in a scholarly journal

Issue

5-6

Publisher

SAGE PUBLICATIONS INC