1. Academic Validation
  2. Expression of human-specific ARHGAP11B in mice leads to neocortex expansion and increased memory flexibility

Expression of human-specific ARHGAP11B in mice leads to neocortex expansion and increased memory flexibility

  • EMBO J. 2021 Jul 1;40(13):e107093. doi: 10.15252/embj.2020107093.
Lei Xing 1 Agnieszka Kubik-Zahorodna 2 Takashi Namba 1 Anneline Pinson 1 Marta Florio 1 Jan Prochazka 2 Mihail Sarov 1 Radislav Sedlacek 2 Wieland B Huttner 1
Affiliations

Affiliations

  • 1 Max Planck Institute of Molecular Cell Biology and Genetics, Dresden, Germany.
  • 2 Czech Centre for Phenogenomics, Institute of Molecular Genetics of the Czech Academy of Sciences, Vestec, Czech Republic.
Abstract

Neocortex expansion during human evolution provides a basis for our enhanced cognitive abilities. Yet, which genes implicated in neocortex expansion are actually responsible for higher cognitive abilities is unknown. The expression of human-specific ARHGAP11B in embryonic/foetal mouse, ferret and marmoset neocortex was previously found to promote basal progenitor proliferation, upper-layer neuron generation and neocortex expansion during development, features commonly thought to contribute to increased cognitive abilities. However, a key question is whether this phenotype persists into adulthood and if so, whether cognitive abilities are indeed increased. Here, we generated a transgenic mouse line with physiological ARHGAP11B expression that exhibits increased neocortical size and upper-layer neuron numbers persisting into adulthood. Adult ARHGAP11B-transgenic mice showed altered neurobehaviour, notably increased memory flexibility and a reduced anxiety level. Our data are consistent with the notion that neocortex expansion by ARHGAP11B, a gene implicated in human evolution, underlies some of the altered neurobehavioural features observed in the transgenic mice, such as the increased memory flexibility, a neocortex-associated trait, with implications for the increase in cognitive abilities during human evolution.

Keywords

basal progenitors; brain evolution; human-specific gene; memory flexibility; neocortex expansion.

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