A transcriptomic taxonomy of mouse brain-wide spinal projecting neurons

Winter, Carla C. and Jacobi, Anne and Su, Junfeng and Chung, Leeyup and van Velthoven, Cindy T. J. and Yao, Zizhen and Lee, Changkyu and Zhang, Zicong and Yu, Shuguang and Gao, Kun and Duque Salazar, Geraldine and Kegeles, Evgenii and Zhang, Yu and Tomihiro, Makenzie C. and Zhang, Yiming and Yang, Zhiyun and Zhu, Junjie and Tang, Jing and Song, Xuan and Donahue, Ryan J. and Wang, Qing and McMillen, Delissa and Kunst, Michael and Wang, Ning and Smith, Kimberly A. and Romero, Gabriel E. and Frank, Michelle M. and Krol, Alexandra and Kawaguchi, Riki and Geschwind, Daniel H. and Feng, Guoping and Goodrich, Lisa V. and Liu, Yuanyuan and Tasic, Bosiljka and Zeng, Hongkui and He, Zhigang (2023) A transcriptomic taxonomy of mouse brain-wide spinal projecting neurons. Nature, 624 (7991). pp. 403-414. ISSN 0028-0836

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Abstract

The brain controls nearly all bodily functions via spinal projecting neurons (SPNs) that carry command signals from the brain to the spinal cord. However, a comprehensive molecular characterization of brain-wide SPNs is still lacking. Here we transcriptionally profiled a total of 65,002 SPNs, identified 76 region-specific SPN types, and mapped these types into a companion atlas of the whole mouse brain1. This taxonomy reveals a three-component organization of SPNs: (1) molecularly homogeneous excitatory SPNs from the cortex, red nucleus and cerebellum with somatotopic spinal terminations suitable for point-to-point communication; (2) heterogeneous populations in the reticular formation with broad spinal termination patterns, suitable for relaying commands related to the activities of the entire spinal cord; and (3) modulatory neurons expressing slow-acting neurotransmitters and/or neuropeptides in the hypothalamus, midbrain and reticular formation for ‘gain setting’ of brain–spinal signals. In addition, this atlas revealed a LIM homeobox transcription factor code that parcellates the reticulospinal neurons into five molecularly distinct and spatially segregated populations. Finally, we found transcriptional signatures of a subset of SPNs with large soma size and correlated these with fast-firing electrophysiological properties. Together, this study establishes a comprehensive taxonomy of brain-wide SPNs and provides insight into the functional organization of SPNs in mediating brain control of bodily functions.

Item Type: Article
Subjects: Research Asian Plos > Geological Science
Depositing User: Unnamed user with email support@research.asianplos.com
Date Deposited: 14 Dec 2023 10:52
Last Modified: 29 Jun 2024 06:39
URI: http://global.archiveopenbook.com/id/eprint/2342

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