Comprehensive cell atlas of the first-trimester developing human brain
The adult human brain likely comprises more than a thousand kinds of neurons, and an unknown number of glial cell types, but how cellular diversity arises during early brain development is not known. Here, in order to reveal the precise sequence of events during early brain development, we used single-cell RNA sequencing and spatial transcriptomics to uncover cell states and trajectories in human brains at 5 – 14 post-conceptional weeks (p.c.w.). We identified twelve major classes and over 600 distinct cell states, which mapped to precise spatial anatomical domains at 5 p.c.w. We uncovered detailed differentiation trajectories of the human forebrain, and a surprisingly large number of region-specific glioblasts maturing into distinct pre-astrocytes and pre-oligodendrocyte precursor cells (pre-OPCs). Our findings reveal the emergence of cell types during the critical first trimester of human brain development.
Comprehensive cell atlas of the first-trimester developing human brain (Official HCA Publication)
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Atlas
Analysis Portals
NoneProject Label
FetalEmbryonicBrainSpecies
Homo sapiens
Sample Type
specimens
Anatomical Entity
Organ Part
Selected Cell Types
Unspecified
Disease Status (Specimen)
normal
Disease Status (Donor)
normal
Development Stage
Library Construction Method
Nucleic Acid Source
single cell
Paired End
falseAnalysis Protocol
analysis_protocolFile Format
Cell Count Estimate
1.7MDonor Count
26