학술논문

A Single-Cell Transcriptomic Atlas of Human Neocortical Development during Mid-gestation
Document Type
article
Source
Neuron. 103(5)
Subject
Stem Cell Research - Nonembryonic - Human
Genetics
Clinical Research
Stem Cell Research
Neurosciences
Mental Health
Human Genome
Autism Spectrum Disorder
Cell Cycle
Cerebral Cortex
Databases
Genetic
Ependymoglial Cells
Epilepsy
Female
Gene Expression Profiling
Gene Expression Regulation
Developmental
Gene Regulatory Networks
Gestational Age
Humans
Intellectual Disability
Interneurons
Neocortex
Neural Stem Cells
Neurogenesis
Neurons
Pregnancy
Pregnancy Trimester
Second
RNA-Seq
Single-Cell Analysis
Telophase
autism
cortical development
differentiation
epilepsy
evolution
human
intellectual disability
neurogenesis
schizophrenia
subplate
Psychology
Cognitive Sciences
Neurology & Neurosurgery
Language
Abstract
We performed RNA sequencing on 40,000 cells to create a high-resolution single-cell gene expression atlas of developing human cortex, providing the first single-cell characterization of previously uncharacterized cell types, including human subplate neurons, comparisons with bulk tissue, and systematic analyses of technical factors. These data permit deconvolution of regulatory networks connecting regulatory elements and transcriptional drivers to single-cell gene expression programs, significantly extending our understanding of human neurogenesis, cortical evolution, and the cellular basis of neuropsychiatric disease. We tie cell-cycle progression with early cell fate decisions during neurogenesis, demonstrating that differentiation occurs on a transcriptomic continuum; rather than only expressing a few transcription factors that drive cell fates, differentiating cells express broad, mixed cell-type transcriptomes before telophase. By mapping neuropsychiatric disease genes to cell types, we implicate dysregulation of specific cell types in ASD, ID, and epilepsy. We developed CoDEx, an online portal to facilitate data access and browsing.