3 research outputs found
Dosage analysis of the 7q11.23 Williams region identifies BAZ1B as a major human gene patterning the modern human face and underlying self-domestication
We undertook a functional dissection of chromatin remodeler BAZ1B in neural crest (NC) stem cells (NCSCs) from a uniquely informative cohort of typical and atypical patients harboring 7q11.23 copy number variants. Our results reveal a key contribution of BAZ1B to NCSC in vitro induction and migration, coupled with a crucial involvement in NC-specific transcriptional circuits and distal regulation. By intersecting our experimental data with new paleogenetic analyses comparing modern and archaic humans, we found a modern-specific enrichment for regulatory changes both in BAZ1B and its experimentally defined downstream targets, thereby providing the first empirical validation of the human self-domestication hypothesis and positioning BAZ1B as a master regulator of the modern human face. In so doing, we provide experimental evidence that the craniofacial and cognitive/behavioral phenotypes caused by alterations of the Williams-Beuren syndrome critical region can serve as a powerful entry point into the evolution of the modern human face and prosociality
GTF2I dosage regulates neuronal differentiation and social behavior in 7q11.23 neurodevelopmental disorders
Copy number variations at 7q11.23 cause neurodevelopmental disorders with shared and opposite manifestations.
Deletion causes Williams-Beuren syndrome featuring hypersociability, while duplication causes 7q11.23
microduplication syndrome (7Dup), frequently exhibiting autism spectrum disorder (ASD). Converging evidence
indicates GTF2I as key mediator of the cognitive-behavioral phenotypes, yet its role in cortical development
and behavioral hallmarks remains largely unknown.We integrated proteomic and transcriptomic profiling
of patient-derived cortical organoids, including longitudinally at single-cell resolution, to dissect 7q11.23
dosage–dependent and GTF2I-specific disease mechanisms. We observed dosage-dependent impaired dynamics
of neural progenitor proliferation, transcriptional imbalances, and highly specific alterations in neuronal
output, leading to precocious excitatory neuron production in 7Dup, which was rescued by restoring physiological
GTF2I levels. Transgenic mice with Gtf2i duplication recapitulated progenitor proliferation and neuronal differentiation
defects alongside ASD-like behaviors. Consistently, inhibition of lysine demethylase 1 (LSD1), a
GTF2I effector, was sufficient to rescue ASD-like phenotypes in transgenic mice, establishing GTF2I-LSD1 axis
as a molecular pathway amenable to therapeutic intervention in ASD
Dosage analysis of the 7q11.23 Williams region identifies BAZ1B as a major human gene patterning the modern human face and underlying self-domestication
We undertook a functional dissection of chromatin remodeler BAZ1B in neural crest (NC) stem cells (NCSCs) from a uniquely informative cohort of typical and atypical patients harboring 7q11.23 copy number variants. Our results reveal a key contribution of BAZ1B to NCSC in vitro induction and migration, coupled with a crucial involvement in NC-specific transcriptional circuits and distal regulation. By intersecting our experimental data with new paleogenetic analyses comparing modern and archaic humans, we found a modern-specific enrichment for regulatory changes both in BAZ1B and its experimentally defined downstream targets, thereby providing the first empirical validation of the human self-domestication hypothesis and positioning BAZ1B as a master regulator of the modern human face. In so doing, we provide experimental evidence that the craniofacial and cognitive/behavioral phenotypes caused by alterations of the Williams-Beuren syndrome critical region can serve as a powerful entry point into the evolution of the modern human face and prosociality