Boyan Bonev Lab
3D Genome and Molecular NeurobiologyBoyan's team deciphers the genetic and epigenetic blueprints of brain development and evolution, thereby unravelling new paradigms at the interplay of transcription factors, chromatin topology and the control of gene expression in vivo.
Boyan's team deciphers the genetic and epigenetic blueprints of brain development and evolution, thereby unravelling new paradigms at the interplay of transcription factors, chromatin topology and the control of gene expression in vivo.
About our research
The mammalian cortex is the most complex region of the brain responsible for higher cognitive functions. Abnormal cortical development often translates into prominent neuropsychiatric diseases, which affect different neuronal subtypes with unique molecular and morphological features. There is increasing evidence that epigenetic regulation of key neural genes is essential for subtype specification and that spatial gene positioning and 3D chromatin folding is crucial for cell fate choices in development, evolution and disease. Therefore a fundamental question in the field is: how is epigenetic identity related to cell fate and what are the functional implication of chromatin remodeling to the temporal and spatial heterogeneity in the cortex? The Bonev Lab focuses on decoding the epigenetic mechanisms of gene regulation in the cortex and how they control temporal and spatial cellular identity in development and evolution.
Define epigenetic and transcriptional heterogeneity in the cortex at the single cell level
To understand how the cortex is built, we need to be able to study how cellular identity evolves in time, ideally at the single cell level. Importantly, chromatin accessibility and 3D genome organization carry unique information that is not provided by single-cell RNAseq and epigenome changes may precede gene expression. Recent breakthroughs in methodology have allowed chromatin structure to be interrogated even at the single-cell level. Therefore, we are in an ideal and timely position to address the spatio-temporal dynamics of gene regulation and 3D nuclear organization in the cortex.
We are developing a highly innovative genomics approach to simultaneously interrogate gene expression and chromatin topology at single-cell level. In addition, we use a combination of single-cell lineage tracing using CRISPR, scATAC-seq and spatial transcriptomics to understand how lineage potential is encoded spatially and temporally in neural stem cells.
Determine how transcription factors and ncRNAs remodel the 3D genome
We have previously discovered that regulating 3D chromatin architecture and enhancer-promoter interactions plays an important role in the control of gene expression and cell fate in the cortex. Furthermore, several key transcription factors and potentially some long non-coding RNAs are associated at the molecular level with dynamic chromatin loops and may function mechanistically by remodeling genome topology.
However, a key unresolved question in the field is if TF binding and/or lncRNAs can physically affect nuclear 3D architecture or simply exploit it in order to spread and bind on chromatin. To disentangle cause and consequence, we are using transgenic mouse lines and CRISPR-Cas9 genome engineering to determine if TF binding is sufficient to induce an ectopic chromatin looping and rewire 3D genome architecture in vivo.
Dissect the changes in 3D genome topology during brain evolution
Cortical evolution in mammals is considered to be a key advance that enabled higher cognitive function such as language. Structural variations including indels, inversions and duplications account for 3-4 times more sequence divergence between the chimpanzee and the human genomes than single-base-pair mutations. Yet, almost all of the comparative evolution studies trying to understand what makes the human brain unique focus on SNPs in coding genes or putative enhancer regions based on proximity to important neural genes. Recent advances in chromatin biology and our own work suggest that changes in 3D architecture can strongly affect gene expression of regions in close physical proximity and not necessarily on the linear 1D genome.
Therefore, we are systematically examining how 3D chromatin organization has changed during primate evolution focusing on the cortex. We use cerebral organoids from mouse, macaque, chimp and human iPSC and compare them with in vivo models of corticogenesis such as the ferret and the human fetal cortex. We will also examine the functional importance of the most promising structural variations using organoids and in mice using the CRISPR-Cas9 system.
- To understand the genomic blueprints guiding billions of neurons to assemble in the most complicated object in the universe – our brain
- To challenge the current status quo by employing interdisciplinary ideas, methods and model organisms
- To think differently and to make a lasting impact in the fields of epigenetics, developmental biology and neuroscience
- To understand the genomic blueprints guiding billions of neurons to assemble in the most complicated object in the universe – our brain
- To challenge the current status quo by employing interdisciplinary ideas, methods and model organisms
- To think differently and to make a lasting impact in the fields of epigenetics, developmental biology and neuroscience
- Develop a lab culture where the focus is on people and they are valued, respected and trusted
- Abandon assumptions and dogmas and embrace “First Principles” approaches
- Go beyond state-of-the-art and always challenge ourselves to do better
- Develop a lab culture where the focus is on people and they are valued, respected and trusted
- Abandon assumptions and dogmas and embrace “First Principles” approaches
- Go beyond state-of-the-art and always challenge ourselves to do better