Cargando…

Epigenomic diversity of cortical projection neurons in the mouse brain

Neuronal cell types are classically defined by their molecular properties, anatomy and functions. Although recent advances in single-cell genomics have led to high-resolution molecular characterization of cell type diversity in the brain(1), neuronal cell types are often studied out of the context o...

Descripción completa

Detalles Bibliográficos
Autores principales: Zhang, Zhuzhu, Zhou, Jingtian, Tan, Pengcheng, Pang, Yan, Rivkin, Angeline C., Kirchgessner, Megan A., Williams, Elora, Lee, Cheng-Ta, Liu, Hanqing, Franklin, Alexis D., Miyazaki, Paula Assakura, Bartlett, Anna, Aldridge, Andrew I., Vu, Minh, Boggeman, Lara, Fitzpatrick, Conor, Nery, Joseph R., Castanon, Rosa G., Rashid, Mohammad, Jacobs, Matthew W., Ito-Cole, Tony, O’Connor, Carolyn, Pinto-Duartec, António, Dominguez, Bertha, Smith, Jared B., Niu, Sheng-Yong, Lee, Kuo-Fen, Jin, Xin, Mukamel, Eran A., Behrens, M. Margarita, Ecker, Joseph R., Callaway, Edward M.
Formato: Online Artículo Texto
Lenguaje:English
Publicado: Nature Publishing Group UK 2021
Materias:
Acceso en línea:https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pmc/articles/PMC8494636/
https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pubmed/34616065
http://dx.doi.org/10.1038/s41586-021-03223-w
_version_ 1784579355425374208
author Zhang, Zhuzhu
Zhou, Jingtian
Tan, Pengcheng
Pang, Yan
Rivkin, Angeline C.
Kirchgessner, Megan A.
Williams, Elora
Lee, Cheng-Ta
Liu, Hanqing
Franklin, Alexis D.
Miyazaki, Paula Assakura
Bartlett, Anna
Aldridge, Andrew I.
Vu, Minh
Boggeman, Lara
Fitzpatrick, Conor
Nery, Joseph R.
Castanon, Rosa G.
Rashid, Mohammad
Jacobs, Matthew W.
Ito-Cole, Tony
O’Connor, Carolyn
Pinto-Duartec, António
Dominguez, Bertha
Smith, Jared B.
Niu, Sheng-Yong
Lee, Kuo-Fen
Jin, Xin
Mukamel, Eran A.
Behrens, M. Margarita
Ecker, Joseph R.
Callaway, Edward M.
author_facet Zhang, Zhuzhu
Zhou, Jingtian
Tan, Pengcheng
Pang, Yan
Rivkin, Angeline C.
Kirchgessner, Megan A.
Williams, Elora
Lee, Cheng-Ta
Liu, Hanqing
Franklin, Alexis D.
Miyazaki, Paula Assakura
Bartlett, Anna
Aldridge, Andrew I.
Vu, Minh
Boggeman, Lara
Fitzpatrick, Conor
Nery, Joseph R.
Castanon, Rosa G.
Rashid, Mohammad
Jacobs, Matthew W.
Ito-Cole, Tony
O’Connor, Carolyn
Pinto-Duartec, António
Dominguez, Bertha
Smith, Jared B.
Niu, Sheng-Yong
Lee, Kuo-Fen
Jin, Xin
Mukamel, Eran A.
Behrens, M. Margarita
Ecker, Joseph R.
Callaway, Edward M.
author_sort Zhang, Zhuzhu
collection PubMed
description Neuronal cell types are classically defined by their molecular properties, anatomy and functions. Although recent advances in single-cell genomics have led to high-resolution molecular characterization of cell type diversity in the brain(1), neuronal cell types are often studied out of the context of their anatomical properties. To improve our understanding of the relationship between molecular and anatomical features that define cortical neurons, here we combined retrograde labelling with single-nucleus DNA methylation sequencing to link neural epigenomic properties to projections. We examined 11,827 single neocortical neurons from 63 cortico-cortical and cortico-subcortical long-distance projections. Our results showed unique epigenetic signatures of projection neurons that correspond to their laminar and regional location and projection patterns. On the basis of their epigenomes, intra-telencephalic cells that project to different cortical targets could be further distinguished, and some layer 5 neurons that project to extra-telencephalic targets (L5 ET) formed separate clusters that aligned with their axonal projections. Such separation varied between cortical areas, which suggests that there are area-specific differences in L5 ET subtypes, which were further validated by anatomical studies. Notably, a population of cortico-cortical projection neurons clustered with L5 ET rather than intra-telencephalic neurons, which suggests that a population of L5 ET cortical neurons projects to both targets. We verified the existence of these neurons by dual retrograde labelling and anterograde tracing of cortico-cortical projection neurons, which revealed axon terminals in extra-telencephalic targets including the thalamus, superior colliculus and pons. These findings highlight the power of single-cell epigenomic approaches to connect the molecular properties of neurons with their anatomical and projection properties.
format Online
Article
Text
id pubmed-8494636
institution National Center for Biotechnology Information
language English
publishDate 2021
publisher Nature Publishing Group UK
record_format MEDLINE/PubMed
spelling pubmed-84946362021-10-19 Epigenomic diversity of cortical projection neurons in the mouse brain Zhang, Zhuzhu Zhou, Jingtian Tan, Pengcheng Pang, Yan Rivkin, Angeline C. Kirchgessner, Megan A. Williams, Elora Lee, Cheng-Ta Liu, Hanqing Franklin, Alexis D. Miyazaki, Paula Assakura Bartlett, Anna Aldridge, Andrew I. Vu, Minh Boggeman, Lara Fitzpatrick, Conor Nery, Joseph R. Castanon, Rosa G. Rashid, Mohammad Jacobs, Matthew W. Ito-Cole, Tony O’Connor, Carolyn Pinto-Duartec, António Dominguez, Bertha Smith, Jared B. Niu, Sheng-Yong Lee, Kuo-Fen Jin, Xin Mukamel, Eran A. Behrens, M. Margarita Ecker, Joseph R. Callaway, Edward M. Nature Article Neuronal cell types are classically defined by their molecular properties, anatomy and functions. Although recent advances in single-cell genomics have led to high-resolution molecular characterization of cell type diversity in the brain(1), neuronal cell types are often studied out of the context of their anatomical properties. To improve our understanding of the relationship between molecular and anatomical features that define cortical neurons, here we combined retrograde labelling with single-nucleus DNA methylation sequencing to link neural epigenomic properties to projections. We examined 11,827 single neocortical neurons from 63 cortico-cortical and cortico-subcortical long-distance projections. Our results showed unique epigenetic signatures of projection neurons that correspond to their laminar and regional location and projection patterns. On the basis of their epigenomes, intra-telencephalic cells that project to different cortical targets could be further distinguished, and some layer 5 neurons that project to extra-telencephalic targets (L5 ET) formed separate clusters that aligned with their axonal projections. Such separation varied between cortical areas, which suggests that there are area-specific differences in L5 ET subtypes, which were further validated by anatomical studies. Notably, a population of cortico-cortical projection neurons clustered with L5 ET rather than intra-telencephalic neurons, which suggests that a population of L5 ET cortical neurons projects to both targets. We verified the existence of these neurons by dual retrograde labelling and anterograde tracing of cortico-cortical projection neurons, which revealed axon terminals in extra-telencephalic targets including the thalamus, superior colliculus and pons. These findings highlight the power of single-cell epigenomic approaches to connect the molecular properties of neurons with their anatomical and projection properties. Nature Publishing Group UK 2021-10-06 2021 /pmc/articles/PMC8494636/ /pubmed/34616065 http://dx.doi.org/10.1038/s41586-021-03223-w Text en © The Author(s) 2021 https://creativecommons.org/licenses/by/4.0/Open Access This article is licensed under a Creative Commons Attribution 4.0 International License, which permits use, sharing, adaptation, distribution and reproduction in any medium or format, as long as you give appropriate credit to the original author(s) and the source, provide a link to the Creative Commons license, and indicate if changes were made. The images or other third party material in this article are included in the article’s Creative Commons license, unless indicated otherwise in a credit line to the material. If material is not included in the article’s Creative Commons license and your intended use is not permitted by statutory regulation or exceeds the permitted use, you will need to obtain permission directly from the copyright holder. To view a copy of this license, visit http://creativecommons.org/licenses/by/4.0/ (https://creativecommons.org/licenses/by/4.0/) .
spellingShingle Article
Zhang, Zhuzhu
Zhou, Jingtian
Tan, Pengcheng
Pang, Yan
Rivkin, Angeline C.
Kirchgessner, Megan A.
Williams, Elora
Lee, Cheng-Ta
Liu, Hanqing
Franklin, Alexis D.
Miyazaki, Paula Assakura
Bartlett, Anna
Aldridge, Andrew I.
Vu, Minh
Boggeman, Lara
Fitzpatrick, Conor
Nery, Joseph R.
Castanon, Rosa G.
Rashid, Mohammad
Jacobs, Matthew W.
Ito-Cole, Tony
O’Connor, Carolyn
Pinto-Duartec, António
Dominguez, Bertha
Smith, Jared B.
Niu, Sheng-Yong
Lee, Kuo-Fen
Jin, Xin
Mukamel, Eran A.
Behrens, M. Margarita
Ecker, Joseph R.
Callaway, Edward M.
Epigenomic diversity of cortical projection neurons in the mouse brain
title Epigenomic diversity of cortical projection neurons in the mouse brain
title_full Epigenomic diversity of cortical projection neurons in the mouse brain
title_fullStr Epigenomic diversity of cortical projection neurons in the mouse brain
title_full_unstemmed Epigenomic diversity of cortical projection neurons in the mouse brain
title_short Epigenomic diversity of cortical projection neurons in the mouse brain
title_sort epigenomic diversity of cortical projection neurons in the mouse brain
topic Article
url https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pmc/articles/PMC8494636/
https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pubmed/34616065
http://dx.doi.org/10.1038/s41586-021-03223-w
work_keys_str_mv AT zhangzhuzhu epigenomicdiversityofcorticalprojectionneuronsinthemousebrain
AT zhoujingtian epigenomicdiversityofcorticalprojectionneuronsinthemousebrain
AT tanpengcheng epigenomicdiversityofcorticalprojectionneuronsinthemousebrain
AT pangyan epigenomicdiversityofcorticalprojectionneuronsinthemousebrain
AT rivkinangelinec epigenomicdiversityofcorticalprojectionneuronsinthemousebrain
AT kirchgessnermegana epigenomicdiversityofcorticalprojectionneuronsinthemousebrain
AT williamselora epigenomicdiversityofcorticalprojectionneuronsinthemousebrain
AT leechengta epigenomicdiversityofcorticalprojectionneuronsinthemousebrain
AT liuhanqing epigenomicdiversityofcorticalprojectionneuronsinthemousebrain
AT franklinalexisd epigenomicdiversityofcorticalprojectionneuronsinthemousebrain
AT miyazakipaulaassakura epigenomicdiversityofcorticalprojectionneuronsinthemousebrain
AT bartlettanna epigenomicdiversityofcorticalprojectionneuronsinthemousebrain
AT aldridgeandrewi epigenomicdiversityofcorticalprojectionneuronsinthemousebrain
AT vuminh epigenomicdiversityofcorticalprojectionneuronsinthemousebrain
AT boggemanlara epigenomicdiversityofcorticalprojectionneuronsinthemousebrain
AT fitzpatrickconor epigenomicdiversityofcorticalprojectionneuronsinthemousebrain
AT neryjosephr epigenomicdiversityofcorticalprojectionneuronsinthemousebrain
AT castanonrosag epigenomicdiversityofcorticalprojectionneuronsinthemousebrain
AT rashidmohammad epigenomicdiversityofcorticalprojectionneuronsinthemousebrain
AT jacobsmattheww epigenomicdiversityofcorticalprojectionneuronsinthemousebrain
AT itocoletony epigenomicdiversityofcorticalprojectionneuronsinthemousebrain
AT oconnorcarolyn epigenomicdiversityofcorticalprojectionneuronsinthemousebrain
AT pintoduartecantonio epigenomicdiversityofcorticalprojectionneuronsinthemousebrain
AT dominguezbertha epigenomicdiversityofcorticalprojectionneuronsinthemousebrain
AT smithjaredb epigenomicdiversityofcorticalprojectionneuronsinthemousebrain
AT niushengyong epigenomicdiversityofcorticalprojectionneuronsinthemousebrain
AT leekuofen epigenomicdiversityofcorticalprojectionneuronsinthemousebrain
AT jinxin epigenomicdiversityofcorticalprojectionneuronsinthemousebrain
AT mukamelerana epigenomicdiversityofcorticalprojectionneuronsinthemousebrain
AT behrensmmargarita epigenomicdiversityofcorticalprojectionneuronsinthemousebrain
AT eckerjosephr epigenomicdiversityofcorticalprojectionneuronsinthemousebrain
AT callawayedwardm epigenomicdiversityofcorticalprojectionneuronsinthemousebrain