Astrocytes Drive Divergent Metabolic Gene Expression in Humans and Chimpanzees

Author:

Zintel Trisha M12,Pizzollo Jason12,Claypool Christopher G3,Babbitt Courtney C123ORCID

Affiliation:

1. Department of Biology, University of Massachusetts Amherst , Amherst, MA , USA

2. Molecular and Cellular Biology Graduate Program, University of Massachusetts Amherst , Amherst, MA , USA

3. Organismic and Evolutionary Biology Graduate Program, University of Massachusetts Amherst , Amherst, MA , USA

Abstract

Abstract The human brain utilizes ∼20% of all of the body's metabolic resources, while chimpanzee brains use <10%. Although previous work shows significant differences in metabolic gene expression between the brains of primates, we have yet to fully resolve the contribution of distinct brain cell types. To investigate cell type–specific interspecies differences in brain gene expression, we conducted RNA-seq on neural progenitor cells, neurons, and astrocytes generated from induced pluripotent stem cells from humans and chimpanzees. Interspecies differential expression analyses revealed that twice as many genes exhibit differential expression in astrocytes (12.2% of all genes expressed) than neurons (5.8%). Pathway enrichment analyses determined that astrocytes, rather than neurons, diverged in expression of glucose and lactate transmembrane transport, as well as pyruvate processing and oxidative phosphorylation. These findings suggest that astrocytes may have contributed significantly to the evolution of greater brain glucose metabolism with proximity to humans.

Funder

National Science Foundation

Publisher

Oxford University Press (OUP)

Subject

Genetics,Ecology, Evolution, Behavior and Systematics

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