Owen White, Kimberly A. Smith, Brian D. Aevermann, William J. Romanow, Joseph R. Ecker, Michael Tieu, Michael Hawrylycz, Sheng-Yong Niu, Brian R. Herb, Jacinta Lucero, Sten Linnarsson, Tanya L. Daigle, Christine S. Liu, Ed S. Lein, Boudewijn P. F. Lelieveldt, Zizhen Yao, Yang Eric Li, Stephan Fischer, Trygve E. Bakken, Jeremy A. Miller, C. Dirk Keene, Scott F. Owen, Wei Tian, Joshua Orvis, Nongluk Plongthongkum, Rosa Castanon, Megan Crow, Thomas Höllt, Bing Ren, Darren Bertagnolli, Weixiu Dong, Herman Tung, Baldur van Lew, Delissa McMillen, Bosiljka Tasic, Angeline Rivkin, Eran A. Mukamel, Nora Reed, Alexander Dobin, Chongyuan Luo, Patrick R. Hof, Nick Dee, Rongxin Fang, Kirsten Crichton, M. Margarita Behrens, Anna Bartlett, Renee Zhang, Olivier Poirion, Josef Sulc, Philip R. Nicovich, Rebecca D. Hodge, Evan Z. Macosko, Staci A. Sorensen, Dinh Diep, Thanh Pham, Songlin Ding, Richard H. Scheuermann, Jayaram Kancherla, Jeroen Eggermont, Seth A. Ament, Ronna Hertzano, Jeff Goldy, Christine Rimorin, Julia K. Osteen, Kimberly Siletti, Steven A. McCarroll, Hanqing Liu, C. Palmer, Saroja Somasundaram, Jonathan T. Ting, Jerold Chun, Xiaomeng Hou, Guoping Feng, Kun Zhang, Fenna M. Krienen, Blue B. Lake, Amy Torkelson, Hongkui Zeng, Sebastian Preissl, Christof Koch, Nikolas L. Jorstad, Andrew L. Ko, Héctor Corrada Bravo, Aviv Regev, Nikolai C. Dembrow, Kanan Lathia, Antonio Pinto-Duarte, Xinxin Wang, Lucas T. Graybuck, Melissa Goldman, Marmar Moussa, William J. Spain, Peter V. Kharchenko, Qiwen Hu, Adriana E. Sedeno-Cortes, Gregory D. Horwitz, Rachel A. Dalley, Anup Mahurkar, Brian E. Kalmbach, Andrew Aldridge, Jesse Gillis, Anna Marie Yanny, Joseph R. Nery, Tamara Casper, Fangming Xie, and Matthew Kroll
The primary motor cortex (M1) is essential for voluntary fine-motor control and is functionally conserved across mammals1. Here, using high-throughput transcriptomic and epigenomic profiling of more than 450,000 single nuclei in humans, marmoset monkeys and mice, we demonstrate a broadly conserved cellular makeup of this region, with similarities that mirror evolutionary distance and are consistent between the transcriptome and epigenome. The core conserved molecular identities of neuronal and non-neuronal cell types allow us to generate a cross-species consensus classification of cell types, and to infer conserved properties of cell types across species. Despite the overall conservation, however, many species-dependent specializations are apparent, including differences in cell-type proportions, gene expression, DNA methylation and chromatin state. Few cell-type marker genes are conserved across species, revealing a short list of candidate genes and regulatory mechanisms that are responsible for conserved features of homologous cell types, such as the GABAergic chandelier cells. This consensus transcriptomic classification allows us to use patch–seq (a combination of whole-cell patch-clamp recordings, RNA sequencing and morphological characterization) to identify corticospinal Betz cells from layer 5 in non-human primates and humans, and to characterize their highly specialized physiology and anatomy. These findings highlight the robust molecular underpinnings of cell-type diversity in M1 across mammals, and point to the genes and regulatory pathways responsible for the functional identity of cell types and their species-specific adaptations., An examination of motor cortex in humans, marmosets and mice reveals a generally conserved cellular makeup that is likely to extend to many mammalian species, but also differences in gene expression, DNA methylation and chromatin state that lead to species-dependent specializations.