Spatiotemporal gene expression trajectories reveal developmental hierarchies of the human cortex

Tomasz J. Nowakowski(University of California, San Francisco), Aparna Bhaduri(University of California, San Francisco), Alex A. Pollen(University of California, San Francisco), Beatriz Alvarado(University of California, San Francisco), Mohammed A. Mostajo-Radji(University of California, San Francisco), Elizabeth Di Lullo(University of California, San Francisco), Maximilian Haeussler(University of California, Santa Cruz), Carmen Sandoval-Espinosa(University of California, San Francisco), Siyuan Liu(University of California, San Francisco), Dmitry Velmeshev(University of California, San Francisco), Johain R. Ounadjela(University of California, San Francisco), Joe Shuga(Fluidigm (United States)), Xiaohui Wang(Fluidigm (United States)), Daniel A. Lim(University of California, San Francisco), Jay West(Fluidigm (United States)), Anne Leyrat(Fluidigm (United States)), W. James Kent(University of California, Santa Cruz), Arnold R. Kriegstein(University of California, San Francisco)
Science
December 7, 2017
Cited by 1,019

Abstract

Systematic analyses of spatiotemporal gene expression trajectories during organogenesis have been challenging because diverse cell types at different stages of maturation and differentiation coexist in the emerging tissues. We identified discrete cell types as well as temporally and spatially restricted trajectories of radial glia maturation and neurogenesis in developing human telencephalon. These lineage-specific trajectories reveal the expression of neurogenic transcription factors in early radial glia and enriched activation of mammalian target of rapamycin signaling in outer radial glia. Across cortical areas, modest transcriptional differences among radial glia cascade into robust typological distinctions among maturing neurons. Together, our results support a mixed model of topographical, typological, and temporal hierarchies governing cell-type diversity in the developing human telencephalon, including distinct excitatory lineages emerging in rostral and caudal cerebral cortex.


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