| Literature DB >> 33888637 |
Peter J Osseward1,2, Marito Hayashi1, Neal D Amin1, Jeffrey D Moore3, Benjamin A Temple1,2, Bianca K Barriga1,4, Lukas C Bachmann1, Fernando Beltran1, Miriam Gullo1, Robert C Clark1, Shawn P Driscoll1, Samuel L Pfaff5.
Abstract
Motor and sensory functions of the spinal cord are mediated by populations of cardinal neurons arising from separate progenitor lineages. However, each cardinal class is composed of multiple neuronal types with distinct molecular, anatomical, and physiological features, and there is not a unifying logic that systematically accounts for this diversity. We reasoned that the expansion of new neuronal types occurred in a stepwise manner analogous to animal speciation, and we explored this by defining transcriptomic relationships using a top-down approach. We uncovered orderly genetic tiers that sequentially divide groups of neurons by their motor-sensory, local-long range, and excitatory-inhibitory features. The genetic signatures defining neuronal projections were tied to neuronal birth date and conserved across cardinal classes. Thus, the intersection of cardinal class with projection markers provides a unifying taxonomic solution for systematically identifying distinct functional subsets.Year: 2021 PMID: 33888637 DOI: 10.1126/science.abe0690
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Science ISSN: 0036-8075 Impact factor: 47.728