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1.
Science ; 383(6690): eabn3263, 2024 Mar 29.
Artículo en Inglés | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-38422184

RESUMEN

Vocal production learning ("vocal learning") is a convergently evolved trait in vertebrates. To identify brain genomic elements associated with mammalian vocal learning, we integrated genomic, anatomical, and neurophysiological data from the Egyptian fruit bat (Rousettus aegyptiacus) with analyses of the genomes of 215 placental mammals. First, we identified a set of proteins evolving more slowly in vocal learners. Then, we discovered a vocal motor cortical region in the Egyptian fruit bat, an emergent vocal learner, and leveraged that knowledge to identify active cis-regulatory elements in the motor cortex of vocal learners. Machine learning methods applied to motor cortex open chromatin revealed 50 enhancers robustly associated with vocal learning whose activity tended to be lower in vocal learners. Our research implicates convergent losses of motor cortex regulatory elements in mammalian vocal learning evolution.


Asunto(s)
Elementos de Facilitación Genéticos , Euterios , Evolución Molecular , Regulación de la Expresión Génica , Corteza Motora , Neuronas Motoras , Proteínas , Vocalización Animal , Animales , Quirópteros/genética , Quirópteros/fisiología , Vocalización Animal/fisiología , Corteza Motora/citología , Corteza Motora/fisiología , Cromatina/metabolismo , Neuronas Motoras/fisiología , Laringe/fisiología , Epigénesis Genética , Genoma , Proteínas/genética , Proteínas/metabolismo , Secuencia de Aminoácidos , Euterios/genética , Euterios/fisiología , Aprendizaje Automático
2.
Science ; 380(6643): eabn3943, 2023 04 28.
Artículo en Inglés | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-37104599

RESUMEN

Zoonomia is the largest comparative genomics resource for mammals produced to date. By aligning genomes for 240 species, we identify bases that, when mutated, are likely to affect fitness and alter disease risk. At least 332 million bases (~10.7%) in the human genome are unusually conserved across species (evolutionarily constrained) relative to neutrally evolving repeats, and 4552 ultraconserved elements are nearly perfectly conserved. Of 101 million significantly constrained single bases, 80% are outside protein-coding exons and half have no functional annotations in the Encyclopedia of DNA Elements (ENCODE) resource. Changes in genes and regulatory elements are associated with exceptional mammalian traits, such as hibernation, that could inform therapeutic development. Earth's vast and imperiled biodiversity offers distinctive power for identifying genetic variants that affect genome function and organismal phenotypes.


Asunto(s)
Euterios , Evolución Molecular , Animales , Femenino , Humanos , Secuencia Conservada/genética , Euterios/genética , Genoma Humano
3.
Science ; 380(6643): eabn2937, 2023 04 28.
Artículo en Inglés | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-37104612

RESUMEN

Thousands of genomic regions have been associated with heritable human diseases, but attempts to elucidate biological mechanisms are impeded by an inability to discern which genomic positions are functionally important. Evolutionary constraint is a powerful predictor of function, agnostic to cell type or disease mechanism. Single-base phyloP scores from 240 mammals identified 3.3% of the human genome as significantly constrained and likely functional. We compared phyloP scores to genome annotation, association studies, copy-number variation, clinical genetics findings, and cancer data. Constrained positions are enriched for variants that explain common disease heritability more than other functional annotations. Our results improve variant annotation but also highlight that the regulatory landscape of the human genome still needs to be further explored and linked to disease.


Asunto(s)
Enfermedad , Variación Genética , Animales , Humanos , Evolución Biológica , Genoma Humano , Estudio de Asociación del Genoma Completo , Genómica , Anotación de Secuencia Molecular , Polimorfismo de Nucleótido Simple , Enfermedad/genética
4.
Science ; 380(6643): eabm7993, 2023 04 28.
Artículo en Inglés | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-37104615

RESUMEN

Protein-coding differences between species often fail to explain phenotypic diversity, suggesting the involvement of genomic elements that regulate gene expression such as enhancers. Identifying associations between enhancers and phenotypes is challenging because enhancer activity can be tissue-dependent and functionally conserved despite low sequence conservation. We developed the Tissue-Aware Conservation Inference Toolkit (TACIT) to associate candidate enhancers with species' phenotypes using predictions from machine learning models trained on specific tissues. Applying TACIT to associate motor cortex and parvalbumin-positive interneuron enhancers with neurological phenotypes revealed dozens of enhancer-phenotype associations, including brain size-associated enhancers that interact with genes implicated in microcephaly or macrocephaly. TACIT provides a foundation for identifying enhancers associated with the evolution of any convergently evolved phenotype in any large group of species with aligned genomes.


Asunto(s)
Elementos de Facilitación Genéticos , Variación Genética , Aprendizaje Automático , Mamíferos , Animales , Mamíferos/genética , Fenotipo
5.
bioRxiv ; 2023 Mar 10.
Artículo en Inglés | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-36945512

RESUMEN

Although thousands of genomic regions have been associated with heritable human diseases, attempts to elucidate biological mechanisms are impeded by a general inability to discern which genomic positions are functionally important. Evolutionary constraint is a powerful predictor of function that is agnostic to cell type or disease mechanism. Here, single base phyloP scores from the whole genome alignment of 240 placental mammals identified 3.5% of the human genome as significantly constrained, and likely functional. We compared these scores to large-scale genome annotation, genome-wide association studies (GWAS), copy number variation, clinical genetics findings, and cancer data sets. Evolutionarily constrained positions are enriched for variants explaining common disease heritability (more than any other functional annotation). Our results improve variant annotation but also highlight that the regulatory landscape of the human genome still needs to be further explored and linked to disease.

6.
Elife ; 112022 05 16.
Artículo en Inglés | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-35576146

RESUMEN

Recent discoveries of extreme cellular diversity in the brain warrant rapid development of technologies to access specific cell populations within heterogeneous tissue. Available approaches for engineering-targeted technologies for new neuron subtypes are low yield, involving intensive transgenic strain or virus screening. Here, we present Specific Nuclear-Anchored Independent Labeling (SNAIL), an improved virus-based strategy for cell labeling and nuclear isolation from heterogeneous tissue. SNAIL works by leveraging machine learning and other computational approaches to identify DNA sequence features that confer cell type-specific gene activation and then make a probe that drives an affinity purification-compatible reporter gene. As a proof of concept, we designed and validated two novel SNAIL probes that target parvalbumin-expressing (PV+) neurons. Nuclear isolation using SNAIL in wild-type mice is sufficient to capture characteristic open chromatin features of PV+ neurons in the cortex, striatum, and external globus pallidus. The SNAIL framework also has high utility for multispecies cell probe engineering; expression from a mouse PV+ SNAIL enhancer sequence was enriched in PV+ neurons of the macaque cortex. Expansion of this technology has broad applications in cell type-specific observation, manipulation, and therapeutics across species and disease models.


Asunto(s)
Elementos de Facilitación Genéticos , Aprendizaje Automático , Neuronas , Análisis de Secuencia de ADN , Animales , Corteza Cerebral/metabolismo , Biología Computacional/métodos , Elementos de Facilitación Genéticos/genética , Globo Pálido , Ratones , Neuronas/metabolismo , Parvalbúminas/metabolismo , Análisis de Secuencia de ADN/métodos
7.
BMC Genomics ; 23(1): 291, 2022 Apr 11.
Artículo en Inglés | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-35410163

RESUMEN

BACKGROUND: Evolutionary conservation is an invaluable tool for inferring functional significance in the genome, including regions that are crucial across many species and those that have undergone convergent evolution. Computational methods to test for sequence conservation are dominated by algorithms that examine the ability of one or more nucleotides to align across large evolutionary distances. While these nucleotide alignment-based approaches have proven powerful for protein-coding genes and some non-coding elements, they fail to capture conservation of many enhancers, distal regulatory elements that control spatial and temporal patterns of gene expression. The function of enhancers is governed by a complex, often tissue- and cell type-specific code that links combinations of transcription factor binding sites and other regulation-related sequence patterns to regulatory activity. Thus, function of orthologous enhancer regions can be conserved across large evolutionary distances, even when nucleotide turnover is high. RESULTS: We present a new machine learning-based approach for evaluating enhancer conservation that leverages the combinatorial sequence code of enhancer activity rather than relying on the alignment of individual nucleotides. We first train a convolutional neural network model that can predict tissue-specific open chromatin, a proxy for enhancer activity, across mammals. Next, we apply that model to distinguish instances where the genome sequence would predict conserved function versus a loss of regulatory activity in that tissue. We present criteria for systematically evaluating model performance for this task and use them to demonstrate that our models accurately predict tissue-specific conservation and divergence in open chromatin between primate and rodent species, vastly out-performing leading nucleotide alignment-based approaches. We then apply our models to predict open chromatin at orthologs of brain and liver open chromatin regions across hundreds of mammals and find that brain enhancers associated with neuron activity have a stronger tendency than the general population to have predicted lineage-specific open chromatin. CONCLUSION: The framework presented here provides a mechanism to annotate tissue-specific regulatory function across hundreds of genomes and to study enhancer evolution using predicted regulatory differences rather than nucleotide-level conservation measurements.


Asunto(s)
Cromatina , Elementos de Facilitación Genéticos , Animales , Cromatina/genética , Humanos , Mamíferos/genética , Redes Neurales de la Computación , Nucleótidos
8.
Genomics ; 114(1): 278-291, 2022 01.
Artículo en Inglés | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-34942352

RESUMEN

Mammalian nephrons originate from a population of nephron progenitor cells, and changes in these cells' transcriptomes contribute to the cessation of nephrogenesis, an important determinant of nephron number. To characterize microRNA (miRNA) expression and identify putative cis-regulatory regions, we collected nephron progenitor cells from mouse kidneys at embryonic day 14.5 and postnatal day zero and assayed small RNA expression and transposase-accessible chromatin. We detect expression of 1104 miRNA (114 with expression changes), and 46,374 chromatin accessible regions (2103 with changes in accessibility). Genome-wide, our data highlight processes like cellular differentiation, cell migration, extracellular matrix interactions, and developmental signaling pathways. Furthermore, they identify new candidate cis-regulatory elements for Eya1 and Pax8, both genes with a role in nephron progenitor cell differentiation. Finally, we associate expression-changing miRNAs, including let-7-5p, miR-125b-5p, miR-181a-2-3p, and miR-9-3p, with candidate cis-regulatory elements and target genes. These analyses highlight new putative cis-regulatory loci for miRNA in nephron progenitors.


Asunto(s)
Cromatina , MicroARNs , Animales , Diferenciación Celular/genética , Cromatina/genética , Cromatina/metabolismo , Riñón/metabolismo , Mamíferos/genética , Ratones , MicroARNs/genética , MicroARNs/metabolismo , Nefronas/metabolismo , Células Madre
9.
J Neurosci ; 41(43): 9008-9030, 2021 10 27.
Artículo en Inglés | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-34462306

RESUMEN

Recent large genome-wide association studies have identified multiple confident risk loci linked to addiction-associated behavioral traits. Most genetic variants linked to addiction-associated traits lie in noncoding regions of the genome, likely disrupting cis-regulatory element (CRE) function. CREs tend to be highly cell type-specific and may contribute to the functional development of the neural circuits underlying addiction. Yet, a systematic approach for predicting the impact of risk variants on the CREs of specific cell populations is lacking. To dissect the cell types and brain regions underlying addiction-associated traits, we applied stratified linkage disequilibrium score regression to compare genome-wide association studies to genomic regions collected from human and mouse assays for open chromatin, which is associated with CRE activity. We found enrichment of addiction-associated variants in putative CREs marked by open chromatin in neuronal (NeuN+) nuclei collected from multiple prefrontal cortical areas and striatal regions known to play major roles in reward and addiction. To further dissect the cell type-specific basis of addiction-associated traits, we also identified enrichments in human orthologs of open chromatin regions of female and male mouse neuronal subtypes: cortical excitatory, D1, D2, and PV. Last, we developed machine learning models to predict mouse cell type-specific open chromatin, enabling us to further categorize human NeuN+ open chromatin regions into cortical excitatory or striatal D1 and D2 neurons and predict the functional impact of addiction-associated genetic variants. Our results suggest that different neuronal subtypes within the reward system play distinct roles in the variety of traits that contribute to addiction.SIGNIFICANCE STATEMENT We combine statistical genetic and machine learning techniques to find that the predisposition to for nicotine, alcohol, and cannabis use behaviors can be partially explained by genetic variants in conserved regulatory elements within specific brain regions and neuronal subtypes of the reward system. Our computational framework can flexibly integrate open chromatin data across species to screen for putative causal variants in a cell type- and tissue-specific manner for numerous complex traits.


Asunto(s)
Conducta Adictiva/genética , Encéfalo/fisiología , Predisposición Genética a la Enfermedad/genética , Variación Genética/fisiología , Neuronas/fisiología , Elementos Reguladores de la Transcripción/fisiología , Animales , Conducta Adictiva/patología , Encéfalo/patología , Bases de Datos Genéticas , Femenino , Humanos , Masculino , Ratones , Ratones Endogámicos C57BL , Ratones Transgénicos , Neuronas/patología , Sitios de Carácter Cuantitativo/genética
10.
J Neurosci ; 40(50): 9772-9783, 2020 12 09.
Artículo en Inglés | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-33188066

RESUMEN

Neuron subtype dysfunction is a key contributor to neurologic disease circuits, but identifying associated gene regulatory pathways is complicated by the molecular complexity of the brain. For example, parvalbumin-expressing (PV+) neurons in the external globus pallidus (GPe) are critically involved in the motor deficits of dopamine-depleted mouse models of Parkinson's disease, where cell type-specific optogenetic stimulation of PV+ neurons over other neuron populations rescues locomotion. Despite the distinct roles these cell types play in the neural circuit, the molecular correlates remain unknown because of the difficulty of isolating rare neuron subtypes. To address this issue, we developed a new viral affinity purification strategy, Cre-Specific Nuclear Anchored Independent Labeling, to isolate Cre recombinase-expressing (Cre+) nuclei from the adult mouse brain. Applying this technology, we performed targeted assessments of the cell type-specific transcriptomic and epigenetic effects of dopamine depletion on PV+ and PV- cells within three brain regions of male and female mice: GPe, striatum, and cortex. We found GPe PV+ neuron-specific gene expression changes that suggested increased hypoxia-inducible factor 2α signaling. Consistent with transcriptomic data, regions of open chromatin affected by dopamine depletion within GPe PV+ neurons were enriched for hypoxia-inducible factor family binding motifs. The gene expression and epigenomic experiments performed on PV+ neurons isolated by Cre-Specific Nuclear Anchored Independent Labeling identified a transcriptional regulatory network mediated by the neuroprotective factor Hif2a as underlying neural circuit differences in response to dopamine depletion.SIGNIFICANCE STATEMENT Cre-Specific Nuclear Anchored Independent Labeling is an enhanced, virus-based approach to isolate nuclei of a specific cell type for transcriptome and epigenome interrogation that decreases dependency on transgenic animals. Applying this technology to GPe parvalbumin-expressing neurons in a mouse model of Parkinson's disease, we discovered evidence for an upregulation of the oxygen homeostasis maintaining pathway involving Hypoxia-inducible factor 2α. These results provide new insight into how neuron subtypes outside the substantia nigra pars compacta may be compensating at a molecular level for differences in the motor production neural circuit during the progression of Parkinson's disease. Furthermore, they emphasize the utility of cell type-specific technologies, such as Cre-Specific Nuclear Anchored Independent Labeling, for isolated assessment of specific neuron subtypes in complex systems.


Asunto(s)
Globo Pálido/metabolismo , Neuronas/metabolismo , Estrés Oxidativo/fisiología , Enfermedad de Parkinson Secundaria/metabolismo , Animales , Corteza Cerebral/metabolismo , Cuerpo Estriado/metabolismo , Ratones , Ratones Transgénicos , Oxidopamina , Enfermedad de Parkinson Secundaria/inducido químicamente
11.
Mol Phylogenet Evol ; 109: 421-429, 2017 Apr.
Artículo en Inglés | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-28215573

RESUMEN

Knowledge concerning the taxonomic diversity of marine organisms is crucial for understanding processes associated with species diversification in geographic areas that are devoid of obvious barriers to dispersal. The marine gastropod family Conidae contains many species complexes due to lack of clear morphological distinctiveness and existence of morphological intergradations among described species. Conus flavidus Lamarck, 1810 and Conus frigidus Reeve, 1848 are currently recognized as distinct taxa, but are often difficult to distinguish by morphological characters and include several synonyms, including Conus peasei Brazier, 1877. C. peasei was originally described by Pease in 1861 (as Conus neglectus) based on slight morphological differences of a population of C. flavidus from Hawaii that distinguished it from C. flavidus from elsewhere. To evaluate the systematics of this group and specifically test the hypothesis of synonymy of C. peasei with C. flavidus, we examined molecular and morphometric data from specimens of C. flavidus, C. frigidus and C. peasei (i.e., C. flavidus from Hawaii). Multiple clades that contain individuals from particular geographic regions are apparent in gene trees constructed from sequences of a mitochondrial gene region. In particular, sequences of C. peasei cluster together separately from sequences of C. flavidus and C. frigidus. Although individuals of C. peasei, C. flavidus and C. frigidus each contain a unique set of alleles for a nuclear locus, a conotoxin gene, alleles of C. peasei are more similar to those of C. flavidus. In addition, sequences of a region of a second nuclear gene are identical among C. peasei and C. flavidus though they are distinct from sequences of C. frigidus. Morphometric data revealed that shells of C. peasei are distinct in some aspects, but are more similar to those of C. flavidus than to those of C. frigidus. Taken together, these results suggest that C. peasei represents a distinct species. Moreover, based on the contradictory relationships inferred from the mitochondrial and nuclear sequences (as well as morphometric data), C. peasei may have originated through past hybridization among the ancestral lineages that gave rise to C. flavidus and C. frigidus.


Asunto(s)
Gastrópodos/genética , Animales , Conotoxinas/genética , Caracol Conus/clasificación , Gastrópodos/clasificación , Genes Mitocondriales , Hawaii , Hibridación Genética , Filogenia
12.
PLoS One ; 9(2): e90146, 2014.
Artículo en Inglés | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-24587248

RESUMEN

Mebendazole is an antihelminthic drug that exerts its effects via interference with microtubule function in parasites. To determine the utility of mebendazole as a potential treatment for vascular diseases involving proliferation of vascular smooth muscle cells, the effects of mebendazole on vascular smooth muscle cell proliferation were tested in vitro and in a mouse model of arterial injury. In vitro, mebendazole inhibited proliferation and migration of murine vascular smooth muscle cells and this was associated with altered intracellular microtubule organization. To determine in vivo effects of mebendazole following vascular injury, femoral arterial wire injury was induced in wild-type mice treated with either mebendazole or placebo control. Compared with placebo-treated mice, mebendazole-treated mice formed less neointima at the site of injury. Mebendazole is effective at inhibiting vascular smooth muscle cell proliferation and migration, and neointimal formation following arterial injury in mice.


Asunto(s)
Mebendazol/farmacología , Músculo Liso Vascular/efectos de los fármacos , Miocitos del Músculo Liso/efectos de los fármacos , Neointima/tratamiento farmacológico , Lesiones del Sistema Vascular/tratamiento farmacológico , Animales , Apoptosis/efectos de los fármacos , Movimiento Celular/efectos de los fármacos , Proliferación Celular/efectos de los fármacos , Modelos Animales de Enfermedad , Hiperplasia , Masculino , Mebendazol/administración & dosificación , Ratones , Neointima/patología , Lesiones del Sistema Vascular/patología
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