Combined somatic mutation and transcriptome analysis reveals region-specific differences in clonal architecture in human cortex
Combined somatic mutation and transcriptome analysis reveals region-specific differences in clonal architecture in human cortex

Combined somatic mutation and transcriptome analysis reveals region-specific differences in clonal architecture in human cortex

Cell Rep. 2025 Nov 13;44(11):116458. doi: 10.1016/j.celrep.2025.116458. Online ahead of print.

ABSTRACT

The human cerebral cortex is specialized into regions, but little is known about how human cellular lineages shape cortical regional variation and neuronal cell-type distribution during development. Here, we map single-cell lineages of human cortical regions and neuronal subtypes using >1,000 somatic single-nucleotide variants (sSNVs) identified from deep bulk whole-genome sequencing and analyzed over 25 regions and >72,000 single cells. In the fronto-parietal cortex, sSNVs are rarely restricted, marking neuron-generating clones that disperse into neighboring regions. In contrast, the primary visual cortex harbors 30%-70% more sSNVs than the neighboring secondary visual cortex. Clones at this border exhibit more restricted dispersion, suggesting late developmental lineage segregation. Single-nucleus sSNV and whole-transcriptome analysis reveal glutamatergic neuron clones with modest regional restrictions that share low-mosaic sSNVs with some GABAergic neurons, suggesting a recent dorsal cortical progenitor. Our analysis reveals human-specific cortical lineage patterns, regional differences in clonal patterns, and late divergence of some glutamatergic/GABAergic lineages.

PMID:41240340 | DOI:10.1016/j.celrep.2025.116458