Resolving the three-dimensional interactome of human accelerated regions during human and chimpanzee neurodevelopment

Publication date

2025-03-20

Authors

Pal, Atreyo
Noble, Mark A.
Morales, Matheo
Pal, Richik
Baumgartner, Marybeth
Yang, Je Won
Yim, Kristina
Uebbing, SeverinORCID 0000-0003-2439-6946ISNI 0000000458350134
Noonan, James P.

Editors

Advisors

Supervisors

Document Type

Article
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License

cc_by

Abstract

Human accelerated regions (HARs) have been implicated in human brain evolution. However, insight into the genes and pathways they control is lacking, hindering the understanding of their function. Here, we identify 2,963 conserved gene targets for 1,590 HARs and their orthologs in human and chimpanzee neural stem cells (NSCs). Conserved gene targets are enriched for neurodevelopmental functions and are overrepresented among differentially expressed genes (DEGs) identified in human NSCs (hNSCs) and chimpanzee NSCs (cNSCs) as well as in human versus non-human primate brains. Species-specific gene targets do not converge on any function and are not enriched among DEGs. HAR targets also show cell-type-specific expression in the human fetal brain, including in outer radial glia, which are linked to cortical expansion. Our findings support that HARs influence brain evolution by altering the expression of ancestral gene targets shared between human and chimpanzee rather than by gaining new targets in human and facilitate hypothesis-directed studies of HAR biology.

Keywords

human accelerated regions, human brain evolution, human gain enhancers, neurodevelopment, outer radial glia, Taverne, General Biochemistry,Genetics and Molecular Biology

Citation

Pal, A, Noble, M A, Morales, M, Pal, R, Baumgartner, M, Yang, J W, Yim, K, Uebbing, S & Noonan, J P 2025, 'Resolving the three-dimensional interactome of human accelerated regions during human and chimpanzee neurodevelopment', Cell, vol. 188, no. 6, e27, pp. 1504-1523. https://doi.org/10.1016/j.cell.2025.01.007