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Comparative Study
. 2025 Feb 3;60(3):414-428.e8.
doi: 10.1016/j.devcel.2024.10.005. Epub 2024 Oct 30.

Comparative single-cell multiome identifies evolutionary changes in neural progenitor cells during primate brain development

Affiliations
Comparative Study

Comparative single-cell multiome identifies evolutionary changes in neural progenitor cells during primate brain development

Yuting Liu et al. Dev Cell. .

Abstract

Understanding the cellular and genetic mechanisms driving human-specific features of cortical development remains a challenge. We generated a cell-type resolved atlas of transcriptome and chromatin accessibility in the developing macaque and mouse prefrontal cortex (PFC). Comparing with published human data, our findings demonstrate that although the cortex cellular composition is overall conserved across species, progenitor cells show significant evolutionary divergence in cellular properties. Specifically, human neural progenitors exhibit extensive transcriptional rewiring in growth factor and extracellular matrix (ECM) pathways. Expression of the human-specific progenitor marker ITGA2 in the fetal mouse cortex increases the progenitor proliferation and the proportion of upper-layer neurons. These transcriptional divergences are primarily driven by altered activity in the distal regulatory elements. The chromatin regions with human-gained accessibility are enriched with human-specific sequence changes and polymorphisms linked to intelligence and neuropsychiatric disorders. Our results identify evolutionary changes in neural progenitors and putative gene regulatory mechanisms shaping primate brain evolution.

Keywords: brain development; brain evolution; chromatin accessibility; gene regulation; neural progenitors; primate cortex; regulatory elements; single-cell multi-omics; transcriptome.

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Conflict of interest statement

Declaration of interests The authors declare no competing interests.

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