4.8 Article

Rewiring of human neurodevelopmental gene regulatory programs by human accelerated regions

Journal

NEURON
Volume 109, Issue 20, Pages 3239-+

Publisher

CELL PRESS
DOI: 10.1016/j.neuron.2021.08.005

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Funding

  1. Orchestra computing cluster [1S10RR028832-01]
  2. Boston Children's Hospital Intellectual and Developmental Disabilities Research Centers (IDDRC) Human Neuron Core [U54HD090255]
  3. NIH [R01NS032457, R01NS115965, T32MH020017, T32GM007753, K00CA222750, R01 NS095654, U01 MH116488, P50 MH106934, GM007748, OD029630]
  4. Good Ventures Life Sciences research fellowship
  5. Allen Discovery Center program
  6. Paul G. Allen Frontiers Group advised program of the Paul G. Allen Family Foundation
  7. Burroughs Wellcome Fund
  8. Surpina and Panos Eurnekian BioFund fellowship
  9. Simons Foundation Autism Research Initiative Bridge to Independence award
  10. Simons Center for the Social Brain postdoctoral fellowship

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HARs are the fastest-evolving regions of the human genome and play a key role in rewiring human-specific neurodevelopmental gene regulatory programs, particularly in enhancing neuronal activity. PPP1R17 is identified as a putative HAR-regulated gene that affects neural progenitor cell cycle progression. These findings highlight the significance of HARs in understanding human-specific neurodevelopment and provide a valuable resource for studying enhancer activity.
Human accelerated regions (HARs) are the fastest-evolving regions of the human genome, and many are hypothesized to function as regulatory elements that drive human-specific gene regulatory programs. We interrogate the in vitro enhancer activity and in vivo epigenetic landscape of more than 3,100 HARs during human neurodevelopment, demonstrating that many HARs appear to act as neurodevelopmental enhancers and that sequence divergence at HARs has largely augmented their neuronal enhancer activity. Furthermore, we demonstrate PPP1R17 to be a putative HAR-regulated gene that has undergone remarkable rewiring of its cell type and developmental expression patterns between non-primates and primates and between non-human primates and humans. Finally, we show that PPP1R17 slows neural progenitor cell cycle progression, paralleling the cell cycle length increase seen predominantly in primate and especially human neurodevelopment. Our findings establish HARs as key components in rewiring human-specific neurodevelopmental gene regulatory programs and provide an integrated resource to study enhancer activity of specific HARs.

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