Genetics linked to evolution of bigger human brain size – Big Think

Posted: October 13, 2022 at 12:45 pm

Changes in the size and organization of the brain distinguish the emergence of modern humans, but we know little about the genetic basis of these changes. Researchers in the Netherlands have now combined large-scale neuroimaging and genomics data to identify genetic variants associated with anatomy and development of the human brain.

One feature that distinguishes the human brain from those of monkeys and apes is its size. Each hemisphere of the human cerebral cortex has a surface area of approximately 1,840 cm2, compared to approximately 600 cm2 for the chimpanzee, our closest living relative. Analyses of endocasts suggest that the cortical surface of Homo sapiens is dramatically expanded, and is shaped differently, compared to extinct hominin species.

These changes were likely accompanied by alterations in white matter tracts, the brains long-range connections. Together, they may have contributed to the emergence of language and other complex cognitive skills.

Gkberk Alagz of the Max Planck Institute for Psycholinguistics in Nijmegen tried to confirm the results of a recent study that identified genetic variants associated with expansion of the human cerebral cortex, by examining brain scanning and genomics data from nearly 19,000 individuals, held at the UK Biobank.Their analyses failed to replicate the earlier findings. But the results suggest this may be because, while functions such as language usually depend on circuits that are localized within one brain hemisphere, the earlier study relied on measures that were averaged across both hemispheres.

With this in mind, Alagz and his colleagues examined neuroimaging and genetic datasets from more than 30,000 individuals, focusing on 33 measures of regional and global surface area, and looking at each hemisphere separately. They also looked at diffusion MRI data to examine 48 different white matter tracts.

This large-scale neuroimaging genomics approach enabled them to identify genetic variants associated with the surface area of multiple brain regions and with the long-range connections both within and between the left and right hemispheres of the brain.

Their analyses revealed that certain gene regulatory sequences associated with the surface area of left hemisphere speech and language regions are enriched in the developing human brain.They also discovered that genetic variants also found in Neanderthals made a far smaller contribution to connectivity of the left uncinate fasciculus, a white matter tract that connects the frontal lobe to the temporal lobe and is involved in language.

The findings, which are published in the Proceedings of the National Academy of Sciences, suggest that evolution of the human brain involved a gain of regulatory genetic elements in the genome. These enhancers become active in the fetal human brain and function to influence the activity of genes that contribute to the surface area of the cortex, one of these being ZIC4, which is implicated in neurogenesis, or the production of new brain cells.

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Genetics linked to evolution of bigger human brain size - Big Think

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