Back to Search Start Over

Primate homologs of mouse cortico-striatal circuits

Authors :
Balsters, J.H.
Zerbi, V.
Sallet, J.
Wenderoth, N.
Mars, R.B.
Balsters, J.H.
Zerbi, V.
Sallet, J.
Wenderoth, N.
Mars, R.B.
Source :
Elife; 2050-084X; vol. 9; e53680; ~Elife~~~~~2050-084X~~9~~e53680
Publication Year :
2020

Abstract

Contains fulltext : 217753.pdf (publisher's version ) (Open Access)<br />With the increasing necessity of animal models in biomedical research, there is a vital need to harmonise findings across species by establishing similarities and differences in rodent and primate neuroanatomy. Using connectivity fingerprint matching, we compared cortico-striatal circuits across humans, non-human primates, and mice using resting-state fMRI data in all species. Our results suggest that the connectivity patterns for the nucleus accumbens and cortico-striatal motor circuits (posterior/lateral putamen) were conserved across species, making them reliable targets for cross-species comparisons. However, a large number of human and macaque striatal voxels were not matched to any mouse cortico-striatal circuit (mouse->human: 85% unassigned; mouse->macaque 69% unassigned; macaque->human; 31% unassigned). These unassigned voxels were localised to the caudate nucleus and anterior putamen, overlapping with executive function and social/language regions of the striatum and connected to prefrontal-projecting cerebellar lobules and anterior prefrontal cortex, forming circuits that seem to be unique for non-human primates and humans.

Details

Database :
OAIster
Journal :
Elife; 2050-084X; vol. 9; e53680; ~Elife~~~~~2050-084X~~9~~e53680
Publication Type :
Electronic Resource
Accession number :
edsoai.on1284046094
Document Type :
Electronic Resource