Abstract
While random X-chromosome inactivation in female cells of placental mammals silences one allele of the majority of X-chromosomal genes, a considerable fraction is only incompletely and variably inactivated. Human model systems to study the dynamics of incomplete X-inactivation are limited mostly to postmortem tissue, thereby disregarding developmental trajectories. Here, we used clonal human female induced pluripotent stem cells to track allele-specific expression of X-chromosomal genes along neural differentiation. We discovered dynamic reactivation and late-silencing of gene expression from the inactive X-chromosome leading to differentiation-induced locus- and lineage-specific usage of the two X-chromosomal alleles. In brain organoids modeling Opitz BBB/G syndrome, an X-linked neurodevelopmental disorder, reactivation of alleles from the inactive X-chromosome rescued cellular phenotypes and led to intermediate manifestations in female tissue. Taken together, our data demonstrate that alleles on the inactive X-chromosome can serve as a critical reservoir dynamically used during differentiation, thereby enhancing resilience of female neural tissue.
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CITATION STYLE
Bertin, M., Todorov, H., Frank, S., Käseberg, S., Menon, R., Gabassi, E., … Karow, M. (2026). Dynamic allele usage of X-linked genes ameliorates neurodevelopmental disease phenotypes in brain organoids. Nature Communications , 17(1). https://doi.org/10.1038/s41467-026-68428-x
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