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Interneuron diversity in the human dorsal striatum

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URI: http://hdl.handle.net/10498/35864

DOI: 10.1038/S41467-024-50414-W

ISSN: 2041-1723

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OA_2024_1020.pdf (5.951Mb)
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Author/s
Garma, Leonardo D.; Harder, Lisbeth; Barba Reyes, Juan Manuel; Marco Salas, Sergio; Díez Salguero, MónicaAuthority UCA; Nilsson, Mats; Serrano Pozo, Alberto; Hyman, Bradley T.; Muñoz Manchado, Ana BelénAuthority UCA
Date
2024
Department
Neurociencias
Source
Nature Communications - 2024, Vol. 15 n. 1 pp. 1-19
Abstract
Decipheringthestriatal interneurondiversity iskey tounderstandingthebasal ganglia circuit and to untangling the complex neurological and psychiatric diseases affecting this brain structure. We performed snRNA-seq and spatial transcriptomics of postmortemhumancaudatenucleusandputamensamples to elucidate the diversity and abundance of interneuron populations and their inherent transcriptional structure in the human dorsal striatum. We propose a comprehensive taxonomy of striatal interneurons with eight main classes and fourteen subclasses, providing their full transcriptomic identity and spatial expression profile as well as additional quantitative FISH validation for specific populations. We have also delineated the correspondence of our taxonomy with previous standardized classifications and shown the main transcriptomic and class abundance differences between caudate nucleus and putamen. Notably, based on key functional genes such as ion channels and synaptic receptors, we found matching known mouse interneuron populations for the most abundant populations, the recently described PTHLH and TAC3 interneurons. Finally, we were able to integrate other published datasets with ours, supporting the generalizability of this harmonized taxonomy.
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Attribution-NonCommercial-NoDerivatives 4.0 Internacional
This work is under a Creative Commons License Attribution-NonCommercial-NoDerivatives 4.0 Internacional

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