4.8 Article

Autism genes converge on asynchronous development of shared neuron classes

Journal

NATURE
Volume 602, Issue 7896, Pages 268-+

Publisher

NATURE PORTFOLIO
DOI: 10.1038/s41586-021-04358-6

Keywords

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Funding

  1. Stanley Center for Psychiatric Research
  2. Broad Institute of MIT and Harvard
  3. National Institutes of Health [R01-MH112940, P50MH094271, U01MH115727, 1RF1MH123977, MH099448]
  4. Klarman Cell Observatory
  5. Howard Hughes Medical Institute
  6. Simons Foundation [346073]

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This study utilized organoid models of the human cerebral cortex to identify cell-type-specific developmental abnormalities resulting from haploinsufficiency in ASD risk genes SUV420H1, ARID1B, and CHD8. The research found asynchronous development of cortical neuronal lineages and distinct molecular pathways associated with these mutations. The study revealed shared cell-type-specific neurodevelopmental abnormalities across ASD risk genes in a manner influenced by individual genomic context.
Genetic risk for autism spectrum disorder (ASD) is associated with hundreds of genes spanning a wide range of biological functions(1-6). The alterations in the human brain resulting from mutations in these genes remain unclear. Furthermore, their phenotypic manifestation varies across individuals(7,8). Here we used organoid models of the human cerebral cortex to identify cell-type-specific developmental abnormalities that result from haploinsufficiency in three ASD risk genes-SUV420H1 (also known as KMT5B), ARID1B and CHD8-in multiple cell lines from different donors, using single-cell RNA-sequencing (scRNA-seq) analysis of more than 745,000 cells and proteomic analysis of individual organoids, to identify phenotypic convergence. Each of the three mutations confers asynchronous development of two main cortical neuronal lineages-gamma-aminobutyric-acid-releasing (GABAergic) neurons and deep-layer excitatory projection neurons-but acts through largely distinct molecular pathways. Although these phenotypes are consistent across cell lines, their expressivity is influenced by the individual genomic context, in a manner that is dependent on both the risk gene and the developmental defect. Calcium imaging in intact organoids shows that these early-stage developmental changes are followed by abnormal circuit activity. This research uncovers cell-type-specific neurodevelopmental abnormalities that are shared across ASD risk genes and are finely modulated by human genomic context, finding convergence in the neurobiological basis of how different risk genes contribute to ASD pathology.

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