- Breuss, Martin W;
- Yang, Xiaoxu;
- Schlachetzki, Johannes CM;
- Antaki, Danny;
- Lana, Addison J;
- Xu, Xin;
- Chung, Changuk;
- Chai, Guoliang;
- Stanley, Valentina;
- Song, Qiong;
- Newmeyer, Traci F;
- Nguyen, An;
- O’Brien, Sydney;
- Hoeksema, Marten A;
- Cao, Beibei;
- Nott, Alexi;
- McEvoy-Venneri, Jennifer;
- Pasillas, Martina P;
- Barton, Scott T;
- Copeland, Brett R;
- Nahas, Shareef;
- Van Der Kraan, Lucitia;
- Ding, Yan;
- Glass, Christopher K;
- Gleeson, Joseph G
The structure of the human neocortex underlies species-specific traits and reflects intricate developmental programs. Here we sought to reconstruct processes that occur during early development by sampling adult human tissues. We analysed neocortical clones in a post-mortem human brain through a comprehensive assessment of brain somatic mosaicism, acting as neutral lineage recorders1,2. We combined the sampling of 25 distinct anatomic locations with deep whole-genome sequencing in a neurotypical deceased individual and confirmed results with 5 samples collected from each of three additional donors. We identified 259 bona fide mosaic variants from the index case, then deconvolved distinct geographical, cell-type and clade organizations across the brain and other organs. We found that clones derived after the accumulation of 90-200 progenitors in the cerebral cortex tended to respect the midline axis, well before the anterior-posterior or ventral-dorsal axes, representing a secondary hierarchy following the overall patterning of forebrain and hindbrain domains. Clones across neocortically derived cells were consistent with a dual origin from both dorsal and ventral cellular populations, similar to rodents, whereas the microglia lineage appeared distinct from other resident brain cells. Our data provide a comprehensive analysis of brain somatic mosaicism across the neocortex and demonstrate cellular origins and progenitor distribution patterns within the human brain.