A comprehensive spatio-cellular map of the human hypothalamus

成果类型:
Article
署名作者:
Tadross, John A.; Steuernagel, Lukas; Dowsett, Georgina K. C.; Kentistou, Katherine A.; Lundh, Sofia; Porniece, Marta; Klemm, Paul; Rainbow, Kara; Hvid, Henning; Kania, Katarzyna; Polex-Wolf, Joseph; Knudsen, Lotte Bjerre; Pyke, Charles; Perry, John R. B.; Lam, Brian Y. H.; Bruening, Jens C.; Yeo, Giles S. H.
署名单位:
University of Cambridge; University of Cambridge; University of Cambridge; UK Research & Innovation (UKRI); Medical Research Council UK (MRC); University of Cambridge; Cancer Research UK; CRUK Cambridge Institute; University of Cologne; University of Cologne; University of Cologne; German Center for Diabetes Research (DZD)
刊物名称:
Nature
ISSN/ISSBN:
0028-2475
DOI:
10.1038/s41586-024-08504-8
发表日期:
2025-03-20
关键词:
frameshift mutation obesity agonist neurons mc4r
摘要:
The hypothalamus is a brain region that plays a key role in coordinating fundamental biological functions1. However, our understanding of the underlying cellular components and neurocircuitries have, until recently, emerged primarily from rodent studies2,3. Here we combine single-nucleus sequencing of 433,369 human hypothalamic cells with spatial transcriptomics, generating a comprehensive spatio-cellular transcriptional map of the hypothalamus, the 'HYPOMAP'. Although conservation of neuronal cell types between humans and mice, as based on transcriptomic identity, is generally high, there are notable exceptions. Specifically, there are significant disparities in the identity of pro-opiomelanocortin neurons and in the expression levels of G-protein-coupled receptors between the two species that carry direct implications for currently approved obesity treatments. Out of the 452 hypothalamic cell types, we find that 291 neuronal clusters are significantly enriched for expression of body mass index (BMI) genome-wide association study genes. This enrichment is driven by 426 'effector' genes. Rare deleterious variants in six of these (MC4R, PCSK1, POMC, CALCR, BSN and CORO1A) associate with BMI at population level, and CORO1A has not been linked previously to BMI. Thus, HYPOMAP provides a detailed atlas of the human hypothalamus in a spatial context and serves as an important resource to identify new druggable targets for treating a wide range of conditions, including reproductive, circadian and metabolic disorders.