16 research outputs found

    Functional enhancer elements drive subclass-selective expression from mouse to primate neocortex

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    Viral genetic tools to target specific brain cell types in humans and non-genetic model organisms will transform basic neuroscience and targeted gene therapy. Here we used comparative epigenetics to identify thousands of human neuronal subclass-specific putative enhancers to regulate viral tools, and 34% of these were conserved in mouse. We established an AAV platform to evaluate cellular specificity of functional enhancers by multiplexed fluorescent in situ hybridization (FISH) and single cell RNA sequencing. Initial testing in mouse neocortex yields a functional enhancer discovery success rate of over 30%. We identify enhancers with specificity for excitatory and inhibitory classes and subclasses including PVALB, LAMP5, and VIP/LAMP5 cells, some of which maintain specificity in vivo or ex vivo in monkey and human neocortex. Finally, functional enhancers can be proximal or distal to cellular marker genes, conserved or divergent across species, and could yield brain-wide specificity greater than the most selective marker genes

    Shared and distinct transcriptomic cell types across neocortical areas

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    The neocortex contains a multitude of cell types that are segregated into layers and functionally distinct areas. To investigate the diversity of cell types across the mouse neocortex, here we analysed 23,822 cells from two areas at distant poles of the mouse neocortex: the primary visual cortex and the anterior lateral motor cortex. We define 133 transcriptomic cell types by deep, single-cell RNA sequencing. Nearly all types of GABA (γ-aminobutyric acid)-containing neurons are shared across both areas, whereas most types of glutamatergic neurons were found in one of the two areas. By combining single-cell RNA sequencing and retrograde labelling, we match transcriptomic types of glutamatergic neurons to their long-range projection specificity. Our study establishes a combined transcriptomic and projectional taxonomy of cortical cell types from functionally distinct areas of the adult mouse cortex.We thank M. Chillon Rodrigues for providing CAV2-Cre, A. Karpova for providing rAAV2-retro, A. Williford for technical assistance, and the Transgenic Colony Management and Animal Care teams for animal husbandry. This work was funded by the Allen Institute for Brain Science, and by US National Institutes of Health grants R01EY023173 and U01MH105982 to H.Z. We thank the Allen Institute founder, P. G. Allen, for his vision, encouragement and support. (Allen Institute for Brain Science; R01EY023173 - US National Institutes of Health; U01MH105982 - US National Institutes of Health)Accepted manuscrip
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