LINE-1 retrotransposons drive human neuronal transcriptome complexity and functional diversification
Citations Over TimeTop 1% of 2023 papers
Abstract
The genetic mechanisms underlying the expansion in size and complexity of the human brain remain poorly understood. Long interspersed nuclear element-1 (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 are largely unknown. Using multiomics profiling, we here demonstrate that L1 promoters are dynamically active in the developing and the adult human brain. L1s generate hundreds of developmentally regulated and cell type-specific transcripts, many that are co-opted as chimeric transcripts or regulatory RNAs. One L1-derived long noncoding RNA, LINC01876, is a human-specific transcript expressed exclusively during brain development. CRISPR interference 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.
Related Papers
- → The impact of retrotransposons on human genome evolution(2009)1,708 cited
- → The impact of L1 retrotransposons on the human genome(1998)519 cited
- → SVA Elements Are Nonautonomous Retrotransposons that Cause Disease in Humans(2003)352 cited
- → LINE‐1 retrotransposons in healthy and diseased human brain(2017)75 cited
- The identification and characterization of inter- and intra-species genetic diversity derived from retrotransposons in humans(2013)