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Transcriptomic Clusters

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transcriptomic clusters

Discover seminars, jobs, and research tagged with transcriptomic clusters across World Wide.
2 curated items2 Seminars
Updated over 3 years ago
2 items · transcriptomic clusters
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SeminarNeuroscienceRecording

A transcriptomic axis predicts state modulation of cortical interneurons

Stephane Bugeon
Harris & Carandini's lab, UCL
Apr 26, 2022

Transcriptomics has revealed that cortical inhibitory neurons exhibit a great diversity of fine molecular subtypes, but it is not known whether these subtypes have correspondingly diverse activity patterns in the living brain. We show that inhibitory subtypes in primary visual cortex (V1) have diverse correlates with brain state, but that this diversity is organized by a single factor: position along their main axis of transcriptomic variation. We combined in vivo 2-photon calcium imaging of mouse V1 with a novel transcriptomic method to identify mRNAs for 72 selected genes in ex vivo slices. We classified inhibitory neurons imaged in layers 1-3 into a three-level hierarchy of 5 Subclasses, 11 Types, and 35 Subtypes using previously-defined transcriptomic clusters. Responses to visual stimuli differed significantly only across Subclasses, suppressing cells in the Sncg Subclass while driving cells in the other Subclasses. Modulation by brain state differed at all hierarchical levels but could be largely predicted from the first transcriptomic principal component, which also predicted correlations with simultaneously recorded cells. Inhibitory Subtypes that fired more in resting, oscillatory brain states have less axon in layer 1, narrower spikes, lower input resistance and weaker adaptation as determined in vitro and express more inhibitory cholinergic receptors. Subtypes firing more during arousal had the opposite properties. Thus, a simple principle may largely explain how diverse inhibitory V1 Subtypes shape state-dependent cortical processing.

SeminarNeuroscienceRecording

Organization of Midbrain Serotonin System

Jing Ren
MRC Laboratory of Molecular Biology, Cambridge
Mar 8, 2021

The serotonin system is the most frequently targeted neural system pharmacologically for treating psychiatric disorders, including depression and anxiety. Serotonin neurons of the dorsal and median raphe nuclei (DR, MR) collectively innervate the entire forebrain and midbrain, modulating diverse physiology and behaviour. By using viral-genetic methods, we found that DR serotonin system contains parallel sub-systems that differ in input and output connectivity, physiological response properties, and behavioural functions. To gain a fundamental understanding of the molecular heterogeneity of DR and MR, we used single-cell RNA - sequencing (scRNA-seq) to generate a comprehensive dataset comprising eleven transcriptomically distinct serotonin neuron clusters. We generated novel intersectional viral-genetic tools to access specific subpopulations. Whole-brain axonal projection mapping revealed that the molecular features of these distinct serotonin groups reflect their anatomical organization and provide tools for future exploration of the full projection map of molecularly defined serotonin groups. The molecular architecture of serotonin system lays the foundation for integrating anatomical, neurochemical, physiological, and behavioural functions.