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. 2025 Jun 26;188(13):3567-3582.e20.
doi: 10.1016/j.cell.2025.04.003. Epub 2025 Apr 28.

Regional differences in progenitor metabolism shape brain growth during development

Affiliations

Regional differences in progenitor metabolism shape brain growth during development

Natalia Baumann et al. Cell. .

Abstract

Mammals have particularly large forebrains compared with other brain parts, yet the developmental mechanisms underlying this regional expansion remain poorly understood. Here, we provide a single-cell-resolution birthdate atlas of the mouse brain (www.neurobirth.org), which reveals that while hindbrain neurogenesis is transient and restricted to early development, forebrain neurogenesis is temporally sustained through reduced consumptive divisions of ventricular zone progenitors. This atlas additionally reveals region-specific patterns of direct and indirect neurogenesis. Using single-cell RNA sequencing, we identify evolutionarily conserved cell-cycle programs and metabolism-related molecular pathways that control regional temporal windows of proliferation. We identify the late neocortex-enriched mitochondrial protein FAM210B as a key regulator using in vivo gain- and loss-of-function experiments. FAM210B elongates mitochondria and increases lactate production, which promotes progenitor self-replicative divisions and, ultimately, the larger clonal size of their progeny. Together, these findings indicate that spatiotemporal heterogeneity in mitochondrial function regulates regional progenitor cycling behavior and associated clonal neuronal production during brain development.

Keywords: brain development; metabolism; mitochondria dynamics; progenitor diversity.

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Conflict of interest statement

Declaration of interests O.H. reports a pending patent for the differentiation of hindbrain neurons from hPSCs.

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