Joint profiling of cell morphology and gene expression during in vitro neurodevelopment

Summary

Differentiation of induced pluripotent stem cells (iPSCs) toward neuronal lineages has enabled diverse cellular models of human neurodevelopment and related disorders. Here, we jointly profiled neuronal morphology and gene expression at single-cell resolution across 60,000 iPSC-derived cortical neurons at three developmental time points with Cell Painting (CP) and single-cell RNA-sequencing (scRNA-seq). By modeling the relationship between morphological features and gene expression within our differentiation system, we annotated image-based features with biological functions and showed that while CP resolves broader neuronal classes than scRNA-seq, it complements transcriptomic data by quantifying the biological processes that drive neuronal differentiation over time, such as mitochondrial function and cell cycle. Further, we found that while over 60% of the cells resembled those seen in the fetal brain, 28% represented metabolically abnormal cell states and broader neuronal classes specific to in vitro cells. We show that iPSC-derived cortical neurons are nonetheless a relevant model for a range of brain-related complex traits, including schizophrenia and bipolar disorder, and that disease heritability can also be captured in the morphological feature space. Finally, we applied CP to iPSC-derived neural progenitors from patients with Kabuki syndrome, revealing morphological signatures of precocious differentiation and altered cell cycling. These results highlight the potential of multi-modal single-cell characterization to reveal complementary and disease-relevant cellular and molecular phenotypes. © 2025, Sundaresh, Meistermann et al.

Authors Sundaresh A, Meistermann D, Lampela R, Yang Z, Woldegebriel R, Ganna A, Puigdevall Costa P, Kilpinen H
Journal eLife
Publication Date 2025 Dec 1;14
PubMed 41324988
PubMed Central PMC12668676
DOI 10.7554/elife.102578

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