TY - JOUR
T1 - Dosage analysis of the 7q11.23 Williams region identifies BAZ1B as a major human gene patterning the modern human face and underlying self-domestication
AU - Zanella, Matteo
AU - Vitriolo, Alessandro
AU - Andirko, Alejandro
AU - Martins, Pedro Tiago
AU - Sturm, Stefanie
AU - O'Rourke, Thomas
AU - Laugsch, Magdalena
AU - Malerba, Natascia
AU - Skaros, Adrianos
AU - Trattaro, Sebastiano
AU - Germain, Pierre Luc
AU - Mihailovic, Marija
AU - Merla, Giuseppe
AU - Rada-Iglesias, Alvaro
AU - Boeckx, Cedric
AU - Testa, Giuseppe
PY - 2019/12/1
Y1 - 2019/12/1
N2 - 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.
AB - 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.
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U2 - 10.1126/sciadv.aaw7908
DO - 10.1126/sciadv.aaw7908
M3 - Article
C2 - 31840056
SN - 0019-5596
VL - 5
SP - eaaw7908
JO - Indian Journal of Pure and Applied Physics
JF - Indian Journal of Pure and Applied Physics
IS - 12
ER -