4.4 Review

Developmental mechanisms underlying the evolution of human cortical circuits

Journal

NATURE REVIEWS NEUROSCIENCE
Volume 24, Issue 4, Pages 213-232

Publisher

NATURE PORTFOLIO
DOI: 10.1038/s41583-023-00675-z

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The advanced cognitive capacities of humans are linked to species-specific cortical features. Changes in neurodevelopmental mechanisms and genomic modifications underlie the unique complexity and function of the human brain. Evolutionary changes in cortical development have resulted in the increased size and connectivity of the cerebral cortex, enabling higher cognitive functions.
The advanced cognitive capacities of humans are linked to the evolution of a number of species-specific cortical features. In this Review, Pierre Vanderhaeghen and Franck Polleux discuss the genomic modifications and changes in neurodevelopmental mechanisms that underpin the human brain's unique complexity and function. The brain of modern humans has evolved remarkable computational abilities that enable higher cognitive functions. These capacities are tightly linked to an increase in the size and connectivity of the cerebral cortex, which is thought to have resulted from evolutionary changes in the mechanisms of cortical development. Convergent progress in evolutionary genomics, developmental biology and neuroscience has recently enabled the identification of genomic changes that act as human-specific modifiers of cortical development. These modifiers influence most aspects of corticogenesis, from the timing and complexity of cortical neurogenesis to synaptogenesis and the assembly of cortical circuits. Mutations of human-specific genetic modifiers of corticogenesis have started to be linked to neurodevelopmental disorders, providing evidence for their physiological relevance and suggesting potential relationships between the evolution of the human brain and its sensitivity to specific diseases.

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