Abstract

The mammalian brain is composed of diverse, specialized cell populations. To systematically ascertain and learn from these cellular specializations, we used Drop-seq to profile RNA expression in 690,000 individual cells sampled from 9 regions of the adult mouse brain. We identified 565 transcriptionally distinct groups of cells using computational approaches developed to distinguish biological from technical signals. Cross-region analysis of these 565 cell populations revealed features of brain organization, including a gene-expression module for synthesizing axonal and presynaptic components, patterns in the co-deployment of voltage-gated ion channels, functional distinctions among the cells of the vasculature and specialization of glutamatergic neurons across cortical regions. Systematic neuronal classifications for two complex basal ganglia nuclei and the striatum revealed a rare population of spiny projection neurons. This adult mouse brain cell atlas, accessible through interactive online software (DropViz), serves as a reference for development, disease, and evolution.

Keywords

BiologyDiversity (politics)Evolutionary biologyComputational biologyGenetics

MeSH Terms

AnimalsBrainCell LineageGene Expression ProfilingGene Expression RegulationDevelopmentalGene Regulatory NetworksHigh-Throughput Nucleotide SequencingMaleMiceMiceInbred C57BLSingle-Cell AnalysisTranscriptome

Affiliated Institutions

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Publication Info

Year
2018
Type
article
Volume
174
Issue
4
Pages
1015-1030.e16
Citations
1697
Access
Closed

Social Impact

Social media, news, blog, policy document mentions

Citation Metrics

1697
OpenAlex
75
Influential
1555
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Cite This

Arpiar Saunders, Evan Z. Macosko, Alec Wysoker et al. (2018). Molecular Diversity and Specializations among the Cells of the Adult Mouse Brain. Cell , 174 (4) , 1015-1030.e16. https://doi.org/10.1016/j.cell.2018.07.028

Identifiers

DOI
10.1016/j.cell.2018.07.028
PMID
30096299
PMCID
PMC6447408

Data Quality

Data completeness: 90%