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Molecular signature of primate astrocytes reveals pathways and regulatory changes contributing to human brain evolution

Katarzyna Ciuba, Aleksandra Piotrowska, Debadeep Chaudhury, Bondita Dehingia, Eryk Duński, Rüdiger Behr, Karolina Soroczyńska, Malgorzata Czystowska, Misbah Abbas, Edyta Bulanda, Sylwia Gawlik-Zawiślak, Sylwia Pietrzak, Izabela Figiel, Jakub Włodarczyk, Alexei Verkhratsky, Marcin Niedbała, Wojciech Kaspera, Tomasz P. Wypych, Bartosz Wilczyński, Aleksandra Pękowska

2025Cell stem cell14 citationsDOIOpen Access PDF

Abstract

Astrocytes contribute to the development and regulation of the higher-level functions of the brain, the critical targets of evolution. However, how astrocytes evolve in primates is unsettled. Here, we obtain human, chimpanzee, and macaque induced pluripotent stem-cell-derived astrocytes (iAstrocytes). Human iAstrocytes are bigger and more complex than the non-human primate iAstrocytes. We identify new loci contributing to the increased human astrocyte. We show that genes and pathways implicated in long-range intercellular signaling are activated in the human iAstrocytes and partake in controlling iAstrocyte complexity. Genes downregulated in human iAstrocytes frequently relate to neurological disorders and were decreased in adult brain samples. Through regulome analysis and machine learning, we uncover that functional activation of enhancers coincides with a previously unappreciated, pervasive gain of "stripe" transcription factor binding sites. Altogether, we reveal the transcriptomic signature of primate astrocyte evolution and a mechanism driving the acquisition of the regulatory potential of enhancers.

Topics & Concepts

BiologySignature (topology)PrimateNeuroscienceEvolutionary biologyHuman brainCell biologyComputational biologyMathematicsGeometryRNA Research and SplicingMicroRNA in disease regulationRNA modifications and cancer