Genomic evolution reshapes cell type diversification in the amniote brain

Author:

Chen DuoyuanORCID,Zhuang Zhenkun,Huang Maolin,Huang Yunqi,Yan Yuting,Zhang Yanru,Lin Youning,Jin Xiaoying,Wang Yuanmei,Huang Jinfeng,Xu Wenbo,Pan Jingfang,Wang Hong,Huang Fubaoqian,Liao Kuo,Cheng Mengnan,Zhu Zhiyong,Bai Yinqi,Niu Zhiwei,Zhang Ze,Xiang Ya,Wei Xiaofeng,Yang Tao,Zeng Tao,Dong Yuliang,Lei Ying,Sun Yangang,Wang Jian,Yang Huanming,Sun Yidi,Cao Gang,Poo Muming,Liu Longqi,Naumann Robert K.,Xu Chun,Wang Zhenlong,Xu Xun,Liu ShipingORCID

Abstract

SummaryOver 320 million years of evolution, amniotes have developed complex brains and cognition through largely unexplored genetic and gene expression mechanisms. We created a comprehensive single-cell atlas of over 1.3 million cells from the telencephalon and cerebellum of turtles, zebra finches, pigeons, mice, and macaques, employing single-cell resolution spatial transcriptomics to validate gene expression patterns across species. Our study revealed significant species-specific variations in cell types, highlighting their conservation and diversification in evolution. We found pronounced differences in telencephalon excitatory neurons (EX) and cerebellar cell types between birds and mammals. Birds predominantly expressSLC17A6in EX, whereas mammals expressedSLC17A7in neocortex andSLC17A6elsewhere, possibly due to loss ofSLC17A7function loss in birds. Additionally, we identified a novel bird-specific Purkinje cell subtype (SVIL+), implicating the LSD11/KDM1A pathway in learning and circadian rhythms, and related numerous positively selected genes in birds, suggesting an evolutionary optimization of cerebellar functions for ecological and behavioral adaptation. Our findings elucidate the complex interplay between genetic evolution and environmental adaptation, underscoring the role of genetic diversification in the development of specialized cell types across amniotes.

Publisher

Cold Spring Harbor Laboratory

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