4.8 Article

Single-cell epigenomics reveals mechanisms of human cortical development

Journal

NATURE
Volume 598, Issue 7879, Pages 205-+

Publisher

NATURE PORTFOLIO
DOI: 10.1038/s41586-021-03209-8

Keywords

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Funding

  1. NIH [U01MH116438, U01MH114825, U01MH115747]
  2. NIMH [R01MH109907]
  3. Autism Speaks Predoctoral Fellowship [11874]
  4. Simons Foundation [SFARI 491371]
  5. NARSAD Young Investigator
  6. William K. Bowes Jr Foundation
  7. Gladstone Institutes
  8. National Institute of Mental Health [1K99MH117165]
  9. US NIH [R01 MH101221, 5U41HG002371-19]

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During mammalian development, differences in chromatin state play a crucial role in cell fate specification and defining cell identity in the developing brain. Through studying chromatin accessibility patterns, it was found that cerebral organoids recapitulate most cell-type-specific enhancer accessibility patterns but lack some open chromatin regions found in vivo. Systematic comparison of chromatin accessibility across brain regions revealed unexpected diversity among neural progenitor cells and highlighted the role of retinoic acid signaling in neuronal lineage specification in the prefrontal cortex.
During mammalian development, differences in chromatin state coincide with cellular differentiation and reflect changes in the gene regulatory landscape(1). In the developing brain, cell fate specification and topographic identity are important for defining cell identity(2) and confer selective vulnerabilities to neurodevelopmental disorders(3). Here, to identify cell-type-specific chromatin accessibility patterns in the developing human brain, we used a single-cell assay for transposase accessibility by sequencing (scATAC-seq) in primary tissue samples from the human forebrain. We applied unbiased analyses to identify genomic loci that undergo extensive cell-typeand brain-region-specific changes in accessibility during neurogenesis, and an integrative analysis to predict cell-type-specific candidate regulatory elements. We found that cerebral organoids recapitulate most putative cell-type-specific enhancer accessibility patterns but lack many cell-type-specific open chromatin regions that are found in vivo. Systematic comparison of chromatin accessibility across brain regions revealed unexpected diversity among neural progenitor cells in the cerebral cortex and implicated retinoic acid signalling in the specification of neuronal lineage identity in the prefrontal cortex. Together, our results reveal the important contribution of chromatin state to the emerging patterns of cell type diversity and cell fate specification and provide a blueprint for evaluating the fidelity and robustness of cerebral organoids as a model for cortical development.

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