| Literature DB >> 26365491 |
Sara L Prescott1, Rajini Srinivasan1, Maria Carolina Marchetto2, Irina Grishina3, Iñigo Narvaiza2, Licia Selleri3, Fred H Gage4, Tomek Swigut5, Joanna Wysocka6.
Abstract
cis-regulatory changes play a central role in morphological divergence, yet the regulatory principles underlying emergence of human traits remain poorly understood. Here, we use epigenomic profiling from human and chimpanzee cranial neural crest cells to systematically and quantitatively annotate divergence of craniofacial cis-regulatory landscapes. Epigenomic divergence is often attributable to genetic variation within TF motifs at orthologous enhancers, with a novel motif being most predictive of activity biases. We explore properties of this cis-regulatory change, revealing the role of particular retroelements, uncovering broad clusters of species-biased enhancers near genes associated with human facial variation, and demonstrating that cis-regulatory divergence is linked to quantitative expression differences of crucial neural crest regulators. Our work provides a wealth of candidates for future evolutionary studies and demonstrates the value of "cellular anthropology," a strategy of using in-vitro-derived embryonic cell types to elucidate both fundamental and evolving mechanisms underlying morphological variation in higher primates.Entities:
Mesh:
Year: 2015 PMID: 26365491 PMCID: PMC4848043 DOI: 10.1016/j.cell.2015.08.036
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Cell ISSN: 0092-8674 Impact factor: 41.582