TY - JOUR
T1 - Inferring and perturbing cell fate regulomes in human brain organoids
AU - Fleck, Jonas Simon
AU - Jansen, Sophie Martina Johanna
AU - Wollny, Damian
AU - Zenk, Fides
AU - Seimiya, Makiko
AU - Jain, Akanksha
AU - Okamoto, Ryoko
AU - Santel, Malgorzata
AU - He, Zhisong
AU - Camp, J. Gray
AU - Treutlein, Barbara
N1 - Funding Information:
We thank the members of the Camp and Treutlein laboratories, as well as the laboratory of F. Theis for discussions; E. Ilcken, A. Weigert, S. Kanton and T. Schaffer for assistance with stem cell and organoid culture; T. Gerber, L. Sidow and K. Sekine for discussions relating to cloning; S. Riesenberg and S. Pääbo for providing the iCRISPPR cell lines; staff at the Institute for Ophthalmology Basel for providing the 01F49i-N-B7 cell line; staff at the Murdoch Children’s Research Institute and Murdoch University for providing the HES-3 NKX2.1GFP/w cell line; M. Dannemann and T. Maricic for providing genotype information for demultiplexing. Illumina sequencing was performed by B. Schellbach and A. Weihmann at the Max-Planck-Institute for Evolutionary Anthropology and I. Nissen, E. Vogel Burcklen and C. Beisel at the Genomics Facility at D-BSSE, ETH Zurich. FACS sorting support was provided by M. Di Tacchio, A. Gumienny, R. Antonialli and T. Horn at the single-cell facility at D-BSSE, ETH Zurich. We thank 10x Genomics for support with multiome experiments. No research with human ES cell lines was funded by the ERC. This work was supported by Chan Zuckerberg Initiative DAF, an advised fund of the Silicon Valley Community Foundation CZF2019-002440 (to J.G.C. and B.T.), the European Research Council (803441-Anthropoid, to J.G.C.; 758877-Organomics, to B.T.; 874606-Braintime, to B.T.), the Swiss National Science Foundation (project grant 310030_84795, to J.G.C.; project grant 310030_192604, to B.T.), the Swiss National Center of Competence in Research Molecular Systems Engineering (to B.T.) and the Bavarian Ministry of Science and the Arts in the context of the ForInter network (to B.T.). J.S.F. was supported by the Boehringer Ingelheim Fonds. F.Z. was supported by EMBO Long-Term Fellowship ALTF 36-2021.
Publisher Copyright:
© 2022, The Author(s).
PY - 2022
Y1 - 2022
N2 - Self-organizing neural organoids grown from pluripotent stem cells1–3 combined with single-cell genomic technologies provide opportunities to examine gene regulatory networks underlying human brain development. Here we acquire single-cell transcriptome and accessible chromatin data over a dense time course in human organoids covering neuroepithelial formation, patterning, brain regionalization and neurogenesis, and identify temporally dynamic and brain-region-specific regulatory regions. We developed Pando—a flexible framework that incorporates multi-omic data and predictions of transcription-factor-binding sites to infer a global gene regulatory network describing organoid development. We use pooled genetic perturbation with single-cell transcriptome readout to assess transcription factor requirement for cell fate and state regulation in organoids. We find that certain factors regulate the abundance of cell fates, whereas other factors affect neuronal cell states after differentiation. We show that the transcription factor GLI3 is required for cortical fate establishment in humans, recapitulating previous research performed in mammalian model systems. We measure transcriptome and chromatin accessibility in normal or GLI3-perturbed cells and identify two distinct GLI3 regulomes that are central to telencephalic fate decisions: one regulating dorsoventral patterning with HES4/5 as direct GLI3 targets, and one controlling ganglionic eminence diversification later in development. Together, we provide a framework for how human model systems and single-cell technologies can be leveraged to reconstruct human developmental biology.
AB - Self-organizing neural organoids grown from pluripotent stem cells1–3 combined with single-cell genomic technologies provide opportunities to examine gene regulatory networks underlying human brain development. Here we acquire single-cell transcriptome and accessible chromatin data over a dense time course in human organoids covering neuroepithelial formation, patterning, brain regionalization and neurogenesis, and identify temporally dynamic and brain-region-specific regulatory regions. We developed Pando—a flexible framework that incorporates multi-omic data and predictions of transcription-factor-binding sites to infer a global gene regulatory network describing organoid development. We use pooled genetic perturbation with single-cell transcriptome readout to assess transcription factor requirement for cell fate and state regulation in organoids. We find that certain factors regulate the abundance of cell fates, whereas other factors affect neuronal cell states after differentiation. We show that the transcription factor GLI3 is required for cortical fate establishment in humans, recapitulating previous research performed in mammalian model systems. We measure transcriptome and chromatin accessibility in normal or GLI3-perturbed cells and identify two distinct GLI3 regulomes that are central to telencephalic fate decisions: one regulating dorsoventral patterning with HES4/5 as direct GLI3 targets, and one controlling ganglionic eminence diversification later in development. Together, we provide a framework for how human model systems and single-cell technologies can be leveraged to reconstruct human developmental biology.
UR - https://www.scopus.com/pages/publications/85139398453
U2 - 10.1038/s41586-022-05279-8
DO - 10.1038/s41586-022-05279-8
M3 - Article
C2 - 36198796
SN - 0028-0836
JO - Nature
JF - Nature
ER -