Mapping the Brain’s Cellular Mosaic: A New Atlas Integrates Form and Function
A landmark study has produced a comprehensive, three-dimensional atlas detailing the spatial density of cell types across the entire mouse brain. This resource uniquely integrates three critical dimensions of cellular identity—transcriptomic, morphological, and electrophysiological features—which have historically been studied in isolation. To construct this atlas, researchers began by generating a transcriptomic cell type map, scaling regional density estimates from brain slices using cell counts and anatomical dimensions. For densely packed regions like the cerebellum, they applied a voxel-wise correction based on Nissl staining intensity to refine the estimates. The team then connected these molecular identities to functional properties by leveraging patch-sequencing datasets from cortical neurons, which combine single-cell mRNA profiles with detailed morphological reconstructions and electrophysiological recordings.
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