Mapping the Brain’s Cellular Mosaic: A New Atlas Integrates Form and Function
A landmark study has created the first quantitative, three-dimensional atlas of cell type density distributions in the mouse brain that integrates transcriptomic, morphological, and electrophysiological features. This resource addresses a critical gap, as existing atlases lack comprehensive spatial data linking these three defining properties of neuronal identity. The team began by generating a transcriptomic atlas, scaling regional density estimates from brain slices using cell counts and anatomical dimensions. For densely packed regions like the cerebellum, they applied sophisticated voxel-wise corrections based on Nissl staining intensity to refine the estimates. To bridge molecular identity with functional characteristics, the researchers leveraged patch-sequencing datasets from cortical neurons, which provide simultaneous mRNA profiles, structural reconstructions, and electrophysiological recordings. This allowed them to classify cells into transcriptomic, morphological, and electrophysiological types.
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