scholarly journals Decision letter: Cell type-specific long-range connections of basal forebrain circuit

2016 ◽  
Author(s):  
Johnny Phong Do ◽  
Min Xu ◽  
Seung-Hee Lee ◽  
Wei-Cheng Chang ◽  
Siyu Zhang ◽  
...  

eLife ◽  
2016 ◽  
Vol 5 ◽  
Author(s):  
Johnny Phong Do ◽  
Min Xu ◽  
Seung-Hee Lee ◽  
Wei-Cheng Chang ◽  
Siyu Zhang ◽  
...  

eLife ◽  
2016 ◽  
Vol 5 ◽  
Author(s):  
Johnny Phong Do ◽  
Min Xu ◽  
Seung-Hee Lee ◽  
Wei-Cheng Chang ◽  
Siyu Zhang ◽  
...  

The basal forebrain (BF) plays key roles in multiple brain functions, including sleep-wake regulation, attention, and learning/memory, but the long-range connections mediating these functions remain poorly characterized. Here we performed whole-brain mapping of both inputs and outputs of four BF cell types – cholinergic, glutamatergic, and parvalbumin-positive (PV+) and somatostatin-positive (SOM+) GABAergic neurons – in the mouse brain. Using rabies virus -mediated monosynaptic retrograde tracing to label the inputs and adeno-associated virus to trace axonal projections, we identified numerous brain areas connected to the BF. The inputs to different cell types were qualitatively similar, but the output projections showed marked differences. The connections to glutamatergic and SOM+ neurons were strongly reciprocal, while those to cholinergic and PV+ neurons were more unidirectional. These results reveal the long-range wiring diagram of the BF circuit with highly convergent inputs and divergent outputs and point to both functional commonality and specialization of different BF cell types.


2015 ◽  
Author(s):  
Jean-Philippe Fortin ◽  
Kasper D Hansen

Analysis of Hi-C data has shown that the genome can be divided into two compartments called A/B compartments. These compartments are cell-type specific and are associated with open and closed chromatin. We show that A/B compartments can be reliably estimated using epigenetic data from several different platforms, the Illumina 450k DNA methylation microarray, DNase hypersensitivity sequencing, single-cell ATAC sequencing and single-cell whole-genome bisulfite sequencing. We do this by exploiting the fact that the structure of long range correlations differs between open and closed compartments. This work makes A/B compartments readily available in a wide variety of cell types, including many human cancers.


Cell ◽  
2004 ◽  
Vol 119 (4) ◽  
pp. 469-480 ◽  
Author(s):  
Songtao Jia ◽  
Takatomi Yamada ◽  
Shiv I.S. Grewal

2018 ◽  
Author(s):  
Louis Richevaux ◽  
Louise Schenberg ◽  
Mathieu Beraneck ◽  
Desdemona Fricker

Knowledge of cell type specific synaptic connectivity is a crucial prerequisite for understanding brain wide neuronal circuits. The functional investigation of long-range connections requires targeted recordings of single neurons combined with the specific stimulation of identified distant inputs. This is often difficult to achieve with conventional, electrical stimulation techniques, because axons from converging upstream brain areas may intermingle in the target region. The stereotaxic targeting of a specific brain region for virus-mediated expression of light sensitive ion channels allows to selectively stimulate axons coming from that region with light. Intracerebral stereotaxic injections can be used in well-delimited structures, such as the anterodorsal thalamic nuclei, and also in other subcortical or cortical areas throughout the brain. Here we describe a set of techniques for precise stereotaxic injection of viral vectors expressing channelrhodopsin in the anterodorsal thalamus, followed by photostimulation of their axon terminals in hippocampal slices. In combination with whole-cell patch clamp recording from a postsynaptically connected presubicular neuron, photostimulation of thalamic axons allows the detection of functional synaptic connections, their pharmacological characterization, and the evaluation of their strength in the brain slice preparation. We demonstrate that axons originating in the anterodorsal thalamus ramify densely in presubicular layers 1 and 3. The photostimulation of Chronos expressing thalamic axon terminals in presubiculum initiates short latency postsynaptic responses in a presubicular layer3 neuron, indicating a monosynaptic connection. In addition, biocytin filling of the recorded neuron and posthoc revelation confirms the layer localization and pyramidal morphology of the postsynaptic neuron. Taken together, the optogenetic stimulation of long-range inputs in ex vivo brain slices is a useful method to determine the cell-type specific functional connectivity from distant brain regions.


2010 ◽  
Vol 38 (13) ◽  
pp. 4325-4336 ◽  
Author(s):  
Nele Gheldof ◽  
Emily M. Smith ◽  
Tomoko M. Tabuchi ◽  
Christoph M. Koch ◽  
Ian Dunham ◽  
...  

Cell Reports ◽  
2021 ◽  
Vol 34 (8) ◽  
pp. 108774
Author(s):  
Shovan Naskar ◽  
Jia Qi ◽  
Francisco Pereira ◽  
Charles R. Gerfen ◽  
Soohyun Lee

2020 ◽  
Author(s):  
Li Tang ◽  
Matthew C. Hill ◽  
Jun Wang ◽  
Jianxin Wang ◽  
James F. Martin ◽  
...  

AbstractTranscriptional enhancers commonly work over long genomic distances to precisely regulate spatiotemporal gene expression patterns. Dissecting the promoters physically contacted by these distal regulatory elements is essential for understanding developmental processes as well as the role of disease-associated risk variants. Modern proximity-ligation assays, like HiChIP and ChIA-PET, facilitate the accurate identification of long-range contacts between enhancers and promoters. However, these assays are technically challenging, expensive, and time-consuming, making it difficult to investigate enhancer topologies, especially in uncharacterized cell types. To overcome these shortcomings, we therefore designed LoopPredictor, an ensemble machine learning model, to predict genome topology for cell types which lack long-range contact maps. To enrich for functional enhancer-promoter loops over common structural genomic contacts, we trained LoopPredictor with both H3K27ac and YY1 HiChIP data. What’s more, the integration of several related multi-omics features facilitated identifying and annotating the predicted loops. LoopPredictor is able to efficiently identify cell type-specific enhancer mediated loops, and promoter-promoter interactions, with a modest feature input requirement. Comparable to experimentally generated H3K27ac HiChIP data, we found that LoopPredictor was able to identify functional enhancer loops. Furthermore, to explore the cross-species prediction capability of LoopPredictor, we fed mouse multi-omics features into a model trained on human data and found that the predicted enhancer loops outputs were highly conserved. LoopPredictor enables the dissection of cell type-specific long-range gene regulation, and can accelerate the identification of distal disease-associated risk variants.


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