Mapping the Brain’s Cellular Census: 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 profiles, morphological structure, and electrophysiological properties. To construct this atlas, researchers began by generating a transcriptomic cell type map, scaling regional density estimates from brain slices with cell counts and anatomical data. In densely packed regions like the cerebellum, they applied a voxel-wise correction based on Nissl staining intensity for greater precision. The team then bridged the gap between genetic identity and functional role by leveraging patch-sequencing datasets, which combine single-neuron mRNA profiles with detailed morphological reconstructions and electrophysiological recordings from cortical neurons.
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