4.5 Article

Comparative single-cell transcriptomic analysis of primate brains highlights human-specific regulatory evolution

Journal

NATURE ECOLOGY & EVOLUTION
Volume -, Issue -, Pages -

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NATURE PORTFOLIO
DOI: 10.1038/s41559-023-02186-7

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By comparing single-cell expression data from five primate species, researchers discovered extensive gene expression differences between humans and non-human primates, which are associated with various brain disorders. They also found that certain genes have deeply conserved co-expression across non-human animals but divergent co-expression in humans, suggesting their potential role in driving rapid evolutionary changes in brain function.
Enhanced cognitive function in humans is hypothesized to result from cortical expansion and increased cellular diversity. However, the mechanisms that drive these phenotypic innovations remain poorly understood, in part because of the lack of high-quality cellular resolution data in human and non-human primates. Here, we take advantage of single-cell expression data from the middle temporal gyrus of five primates (human, chimp, gorilla, macaque and marmoset) to identify 57 homologous cell types and generate cell type-specific gene co-expression networks for comparative analysis. Although orthologue expression patterns are generally well conserved, we find 24% of genes with extensive differences between human and non-human primates (3,383 out of 14,131), which are also associated with multiple brain disorders. To assess the functional significance of gene expression differences in an evolutionary context, we evaluate changes in network connectivity across meta-analytic co-expression networks from 19 animals. We find that a subset of these genes has deeply conserved co-expression across all non-human animals, and strongly divergent co-expression relationships in humans (139 out of 3,383, <1% of primate orthologues). Genes with human-specific cellular expression and co-expression profiles (such as NHEJ1, GTF2H2, C2 and BBS5) typically evolve under relaxed selective constraints and may drive rapid evolutionary change in brain function.

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