Author:
Khrameeva Ekaterina,Kurochkin Ilia,Han Dingding,Guijarro Patricia,Kanton Sabina,Santel Malgorzata,Qian Zhengzong,Rong Shen,Mazin Pavel,Sabirov Marat,Bulat Matvei,Efimova Olga,Tkachev Anna,Guo Song,Sherwood Chet C.,Camp J. Gray,Pääbo Svante,Treutlein Barbara,Khaitovich Philipp
Abstract
Identification of gene expression traits unique to the human brain sheds light on the molecular mechanisms underlying human evolution. Here, we searched for uniquely human gene expression traits by analyzing 422 brain samples from humans, chimpanzees, bonobos, and macaques representing 33 anatomical regions, as well as 88,047 cell nuclei composing three of these regions. Among 33 regions, cerebral cortex areas, hypothalamus, and cerebellar gray and white matter evolved rapidly in humans. At the cellular level, astrocytes and oligodendrocyte progenitors displayed more differences in the human evolutionary lineage than the neurons. Comparison of the bulk tissue and single-nuclei sequencing revealed that conventional RNA sequencing did not detect up to two-thirds of cell-type-specific evolutionary differences.
Funder
Russian Foundation for Basic Research
Chinese Academy of Sciences
National Natural Science Foundation of China
National One Thousand Foreign Experts Plan
the National Key R&D Program of China
the Russian Science Foundation
Publisher
Cold Spring Harbor Laboratory
Subject
Genetics (clinical),Genetics
Cited by
102 articles.
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