NEUROG2 regulates a human-specific neurodevelopmental gene regulatory program

biorxiv(2024)

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摘要
Unique hallmarks of human neocortical development include slower rates of neurogenesis and the establishment of an extracellular matrix-rich, outer-subventricular zone that supports basal neural progenitor cell expansion. How gene regulatory networks have evolved to support these human-specific neurodevelopmental features is poorly understood. Mining single cell data from cerebral organoids and human fetal cortices, we found that NEUROG2 expression is enriched in basal neural progenitor cells. To identify and purify NEUROG2-expressing cells and trace their short-term lineage, we engineered two NEUROG2-mCherry knock-in human embryonic stem cell lines to produce cerebral organoids. Transcriptomic profiling of mCherry-high organoid cells revealed elevated expression of PPP1R17, associated with a fast-evolving human-accelerated regulatory region, oligodendrocyte precursor cell and extracellular matrix-associated gene transcripts. Conversely, only neurogenic gene transcripts were enriched in mCherry-high cortical cells from Neurog2:mCherry knock-in mice. Finally, we show that Neurog2 is sufficient to induce Ppp1r17, which slows human neural progenitor cell division, and Col13a1, an extracellular matrix gene, in P19 cells. NEUROG2 thus regulates a human neurodevelopmental gene regulatory program implicated in supporting a pro-proliferative basal progenitor cell niche and tempering the neurogenic pace. ### Competing Interest Statement The authors have declared no competing interest.
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