Journal
DEVELOPMENTAL NEUROBIOLOGY
Volume 82, Issue 4, Pages 345-363Publisher
WILEY
DOI: 10.1002/dneu.22876
Keywords
epigenome editing; gene regulation; neocortex; neurodevelopmental disorder; Polycomb
Categories
Funding
- German Research Foundation [AL 2231/1-1]
- Schram foundation
- TU Dresden
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The development of the neocortex is influenced by PcG regulation, which controls gene expression patterns and transcription repression. Understanding PcG regulation helps us comprehend human cortex development, as well as the mechanisms underlying neurodevelopmental disorders and cancer.
The neocortex is considered the seat of higher cognitive function in humans. It develops from a sheet of neural progenitor cells, most of which eventually give rise to neurons. This process of cell fate determination is controlled by precise temporal and spatial gene expression patterns that in turn are affected by epigenetic mechanisms including Polycomb group (PcG) regulation. PcG proteins assemble in multiprotein complexes and catalyze repressive posttranslational histone modifications. Their association with neurodevelopmental disease and various types of cancer of the central nervous system, as well as observations in mouse models, has implicated these epigenetic modifiers in controlling various stages of cortex development. The precise mechanisms conveying PcG-associated transcriptional repression remain incompletely understood and are an active field of research. PcG activity appears to be highly context-specific, raising the question of species-specific differences in the regulation of neural stem and progenitor regulation. In this review, we will discuss our growing understanding of how PcG regulation affects human cortex development, based on studies in murine model systems, but focusing mostly on findings obtained from examining impaired PcG activity in the context of human neurodevelopmental disorders and cancer. Furthermore, we will highlight relevant experimental approaches for functional investigations of PcG regulation in human cortex development.
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