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Conserved cell types with divergent features in human versus mouse cortex

Authors :
Hodge, Rebecca
Bakken, Trygve
Miller, Jeremy
Smith, Kimberly
Barkan, Eliza
Graybuck, Lucas
Close, Jennie
Long, Brian
Johansen, Nelson
Penn, Osnat
Yao, Zizhen
Eggermont, Jeroen
Höllt, Thomas
Levi, Boaz
Shehata, Soraya
Aevermann, Brian
Beller, Allison
Bertagnolli, Darren
Brouner, Krissy
Casper, Tamara
Cobbs, Charles
Dalley, Rachel
Dee, Nick
Ding, Song-Lin
Ellenbogen, Richard
Fong, Olivia
Garren, Emma
Goldy, Jeff
Gwinn, Ryder
Hirschstein, Daniel
Keene, C.
Keshk, Mohamed
Ko, Andrew
Lathia, Kanan
Mahfouz, Ahmed
Maltzer, Zoe
McGraw, Medea
Nguyen, Thuc
Nyhus, Julie
Ojemann, Jeffrey
Oldre, Aaron
Parry, Sheana
Reynolds, Shannon
Rimorin, Christine
Shapovalova, Nadiya
Somasundaram, Saroja
Szafer, Aaron
Thomsen, Elliot
Tieu, Michael
Quon, Gerald
Scheuermann, Richard
Yuste, Rafael
Sunkin, Susan
Lelieveldt, Boudewijn
Feng, David
Ng, Lydia
Bernard, Amy
Hawrylycz, Michael
Phillips, John
Tasic, Bosiljka
Zeng, Hongkui
Jones, Allan
Koch, Christof
Lein, Ed
Source :
Nature; September 2019, Vol. 573 Issue: 7772 p61-68, 8p
Publication Year :
2019

Abstract

Elucidating the cellular architecture of the human cerebral cortex is central to understanding our cognitive abilities and susceptibility to disease. Here we used single-nucleus RNA-sequencing analysis to perform a comprehensive study of cell types in the middle temporal gyrus of human cortex. We identified a highly diverse set of excitatory and inhibitory neuron types that are mostly sparse, with excitatory types being less layer-restricted than expected. Comparison to similar mouse cortex single-cell RNA-sequencing datasets revealed a surprisingly well-conserved cellular architecture that enables matching of homologous types and predictions of properties of human cell types. Despite this general conservation, we also found extensive differences between homologous human and mouse cell types, including marked alterations in proportions, laminar distributions, gene expression and morphology. These species-specific features emphasize the importance of directly studying human brain. RNA-sequencing analysis of cells in the human cortex enabled identification of diverse cell types, revealing well-conserved architecture and homologous cell types as well as extensive differences when compared with datasets covering the analogous region of the mouse brain.

Details

Language :
English
ISSN :
00280836 and 14764687
Volume :
573
Issue :
7772
Database :
Supplemental Index
Journal :
Nature
Publication Type :
Periodical
Accession number :
ejs50823426
Full Text :
https://doi.org/10.1038/s41586-019-1506-7