학술논문

Transcriptional landscape of the prenatal human brain.
Document Type
article
Source
Nature. 508(7495)
Subject
Brain
Neocortex
Fetus
Animals
Humans
Mice
Anatomy
Artistic
Species Specificity
Gene Expression Regulation
Developmental
Conserved Sequence
Gene Regulatory Networks
Atlases as Topic
Transcriptome
Anatomy
Artistic
Gene Expression Regulation
Developmental
General Science & Technology
Language
Abstract
The anatomical and functional architecture of the human brain is mainly determined by prenatal transcriptional processes. We describe an anatomically comprehensive atlas of the mid-gestational human brain, including de novo reference atlases, in situ hybridization, ultra-high-resolution magnetic resonance imaging (MRI) and microarray analysis on highly discrete laser-microdissected brain regions. In developing cerebral cortex, transcriptional differences are found between different proliferative and post-mitotic layers, wherein laminar signatures reflect cellular composition and developmental processes. Cytoarchitectural differences between human and mouse have molecular correlates, including species differences in gene expression in subplate, although surprisingly we find minimal differences between the inner and outer subventricular zones even though the outer zone is expanded in humans. Both germinal and post-mitotic cortical layers exhibit fronto-temporal gradients, with particular enrichment in the frontal lobe. Finally, many neurodevelopmental disorder and human-evolution-related genes show patterned expression, potentially underlying unique features of human cortical formation. These data provide a rich, freely-accessible resource for understanding human brain development.