Nature Communications (Mar 2024)

Dynamic enhancer landscapes in human craniofacial development

  • Sudha Sunil Rajderkar,
  • Kitt Paraiso,
  • Maria Luisa Amaral,
  • Michael Kosicki,
  • Laura E. Cook,
  • Fabrice Darbellay,
  • Cailyn H. Spurrell,
  • Marco Osterwalder,
  • Yiwen Zhu,
  • Han Wu,
  • Sarah Yasmeen Afzal,
  • Matthew J. Blow,
  • Guy Kelman,
  • Iros Barozzi,
  • Yoko Fukuda-Yuzawa,
  • Jennifer A. Akiyama,
  • Veena Afzal,
  • Stella Tran,
  • Ingrid Plajzer-Frick,
  • Catherine S. Novak,
  • Momoe Kato,
  • Riana D. Hunter,
  • Kianna von Maydell,
  • Allen Wang,
  • Lin Lin,
  • Sebastian Preissl,
  • Steven Lisgo,
  • Bing Ren,
  • Diane E. Dickel,
  • Len A. Pennacchio,
  • Axel Visel

DOI
https://doi.org/10.1038/s41467-024-46396-4
Journal volume & issue
Vol. 15, no. 1
pp. 1 – 18

Abstract

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Abstract The genetic basis of human facial variation and craniofacial birth defects remains poorly understood. Distant-acting transcriptional enhancers control the fine-tuned spatiotemporal expression of genes during critical stages of craniofacial development. However, a lack of accurate maps of the genomic locations and cell type-resolved activities of craniofacial enhancers prevents their systematic exploration in human genetics studies. Here, we combine histone modification, chromatin accessibility, and gene expression profiling of human craniofacial development with single-cell analyses of the developing mouse face to define the regulatory landscape of facial development at tissue- and single cell-resolution. We provide temporal activity profiles for 14,000 human developmental craniofacial enhancers. We find that 56% of human craniofacial enhancers share chromatin accessibility in the mouse and we provide cell population- and embryonic stage-resolved predictions of their in vivo activity. Taken together, our data provide an expansive resource for genetic and developmental studies of human craniofacial development.