| Literature DB >> 33508230 |
Xin Luo1, Yuting Liu2, Dachang Dang3, Ting Hu4, Yingping Hou5, Xiaoyu Meng4, Fengyun Zhang4, Tingting Li2, Can Wang3, Min Li6, Haixu Wu4, Qiushuo Shen6, Yan Hu6, Xuerui Zeng4, Xiechao He7, Lanzhen Yan7, Shihua Zhang8, Cheng Li9, Bing Su10.
Abstract
Elucidating the regulatory mechanisms of human brain evolution is essential to understanding human cognition and mental disorders. We generated multi-omics profiles and constructed a high-resolution map of 3D genome architecture of rhesus macaque during corticogenesis. By comparing the 3D genomes of human, macaque, and mouse brains, we identified many human-specific chromatin structure changes, including 499 topologically associating domains (TADs) and 1,266 chromatin loops. The human-specific loops are significantly enriched in enhancer-enhancer interactions, and the regulated genes show human-specific expression changes in the subplate, a transient zone of the developing brain critical for neural circuit formation and plasticity. Notably, many human-specific sequence changes are located in the human-specific TAD boundaries and loop anchors, which may generate new transcription factor binding sites and chromatin structures in human. Collectively, the presented data highlight the value of comparative 3D genome analyses in dissecting the regulatory mechanisms of brain development and evolution.Entities:
Keywords: 3D genome; EPHA7; TAD; brain; brain evolution; chromatin structure; corticogenesis; loop; macaque; subplate
Year: 2021 PMID: 33508230 DOI: 10.1016/j.cell.2021.01.001
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Cell ISSN: 0092-8674 Impact factor: 41.582