Cellular development and evolution of the mammalian cerebellum

Author:

Sepp MariORCID,Leiss KevinORCID,Murat FlorentORCID,Okonechnikov Konstantin,Joshi PiyushORCID,Leushkin Evgeny,Spänig Lisa,Mbengue NoeORCID,Schneider Céline,Schmidt Julia,Trost Nils,Schauer Maria,Khaitovich Philipp,Lisgo StevenORCID,Palkovits MiklósORCID,Giere PeterORCID,Kutscher Lena M.ORCID,Anders SimonORCID,Cardoso-Moreira MargaridaORCID,Sarropoulos IoannisORCID,Pfister Stefan M.ORCID,Kaessmann HenrikORCID

Abstract

AbstractThe expansion of the neocortex, a hallmark of mammalian evolution1,2, was accompanied by an increase in cerebellar neuron numbers3. However, little is known about the evolution of the cellular programmes underlying the development of the cerebellum in mammals. In this study we generated single-nucleus RNA-sequencing data for around 400,000 cells to trace the development of the cerebellum from early neurogenesis to adulthood in human, mouse and the marsupial opossum. We established a consensus classification of the cellular diversity in the developing mammalian cerebellum and validated it by spatial mapping in the fetal human cerebellum. Our cross-species analyses revealed largely conserved developmental dynamics of cell-type generation, except for Purkinje cells, for which we observed an expansion of early-born subtypes in the human lineage. Global transcriptome profiles, conserved cell-state markers and gene-expression trajectories across neuronal differentiation show that cerebellar cell-type-defining programmes have been overall preserved for at least 160 million years. However, we also identified many orthologous genes that gained or lost expression in cerebellar neural cell types in one of the species or evolved new expression trajectories during neuronal differentiation, indicating widespread gene repurposing at the cell-type level. In sum, our study unveils shared and lineage-specific gene-expression programmes governing the development of cerebellar cells and expands our understanding of mammalian brain evolution.

Publisher

Springer Science and Business Media LLC

Subject

Multidisciplinary

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