Abstract
AbstractKnowledge of the cell-type-specific composition of the brain is useful in order to understand the role of each cell type as part of the network. Here, we estimated the composition of the whole cortex in terms of well characterised morphological and electrophysiological inhibitory neuron types (me-types). We derived probabilistic me-type densities from an existing atlas of molecularly defined cell-type densities in the mouse cortex. We used a well-established me-type classification from rat somatosensory cortex to populate the cortex. These me-types were well characterized morphologically and electrophysiologically but they lacked molecular marker identity labels. To extrapolate this missing information, we employed an additional dataset from the Allen Institute for Brain Science containing molecular identity as well as morphological and electrophysiological data for mouse cortical neurons. We first built a latent space based on a number of comparable morphological and electrical features common to both data sources. We then identified 13 morpho-electrical clusters that merged neurons from both datasets while being molecularly homogeneous. The resulting clusters best mirror the molecular identity classification solely using available morpho-electrical features. Finally, we stochastically assigned a molecular identity to a me-type neuron based on the latent space cluster it was assigned to. The resulting mapping was used to derive inhibitory me-types densities in the cortex.Author SummaryThe computational abilities of the brain arise from its organisation principles at the cellular level. One of these principles is the neuronal type composition over different regions. Since computational functions of neurons are best described by their morphological and electrophysiological properties, it is logical to use morpho-electrically defined cell types to describe brain composition. However, characterizing morpho-electrical properties of cells involve low-throughput techniques not very well suited to scan the whole brain. Thanks to recent progress on transcriptomic and immuno-staining techniques we are now able to get a more accurate snapshot of the mouse brain composition for molecularly defined cell types.How to link molecularly defined cell types with morpho-electrical cell types remains an open question. Several studies have explored this problem providing valuable three-modal datasets combining electrical, morphological and molecular properties of cortical neurons. The long-term goal of the Blue Brain Project (BBP) is to accurately model the mouse’s whole brain, which requires detailed biophysical models of neurons. Instead of going through the time-consuming process of producing detailed models from the three-modal datasets, we explored a time-saving method. We mapped the already available detailed morpho-electrical models from the BBP rat dataset to cells from a three-modal mouse dataset. We thus assigned a molecular identity to the neuron models allowing us to populate the whole mouse cortex with detailed neuron models.
Publisher
Cold Spring Harbor Laboratory
Cited by
1 articles.
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