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L1 retrotransposons drive human neuronal transcriptome complexity and functional diversification

Authors :
Raquel Garza
Diahann Atacho
Anita Adami
Patricia Gerdes
Meghna Vinod
PingHsun Hsieh
Ofelia Karlsson
Vivien Horvath
Pia A. Johansson
Ninoslav Pandiloski
Jon Matas
Annelies Quaegebeur
Antonina Kouli
Yogita Sharma
Marie E Jönsson
Emanuela Monni
Elisabet Englund
Evan E. Eichler
Molly Hammell
Roger A. Barker
Zaal Kokaia
Christopher H. Douse
Johan Jakobsson
Publication Year :
2023
Publisher :
Cold Spring Harbor Laboratory, 2023.

Abstract

The genetic mechanisms underlying the expansion in size and complexity of the human brain remains poorly understood. L1 retrotransposons are a source of divergent genetic information in hominoid genomes, but their importance in physiological functions and their contribution to human brain evolution is largely unknown. Using multi-omic profiling we here demonstrate that L1-promoters are dynamically active in the developing and adult human brain. L1s generate hundreds of developmentally regulated and cell-type specific transcripts, many which are co-opted as chimeric transcripts or regulatory RNAs. One L1-derived lncRNA, LINC01876, is a human-specific transcript expressed exclusively during brain development. CRISPRi-silencing of LINC01876 results in reduced size of cerebral organoids and premature differentiation of neural progenitors, implicating L1s in human-specific developmental processes. In summary, our results demonstrate that L1-derived transcripts provide a previously undescribed layer of primate- and human-specific transcriptome complexity that contributes to the functional diversification of the human brain.

Details

Database :
OpenAIRE
Accession number :
edsair.doi...........ddf321c7e79d7591ab8ac4d4ec1f47a3
Full Text :
https://doi.org/10.1101/2023.03.04.531072