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1.
bioRxiv ; 2023 Sep 21.
Article in English | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-37790503

ABSTRACT

Proper brain function requires the assembly and function of diverse populations of neurons and glia. Single cell gene expression studies have mostly focused on characterization of neuronal cell diversity; however, recent studies have revealed substantial diversity of glial cells, particularly astrocytes. To better understand glial cell types and their roles in neurobiology, we built a new suite of adeno-associated viral (AAV)-based genetic tools to enable genetic access to astrocytes and oligodendrocytes. These oligodendrocyte and astrocyte enhancer-AAVs are highly specific (usually > 95% cell type specificity) with variable expression levels, and our astrocyte enhancer-AAVs show multiple distinct expression patterns reflecting the spatial distribution of astrocyte cell types. To provide the best glial-specific functional tools, several enhancer-AAVs were: optimized for higher expression levels, shown to be functional and specific in rat and macaque, shown to maintain specific activity in epilepsy where traditional promoters changed activity, and used to drive functional transgenes in astrocytes including Cre recombinase and acetylcholine-responsive sensor iAChSnFR. The astrocyte-specific iAChSnFR revealed a clear reward-dependent acetylcholine response in astrocytes of the nucleus accumbens during reinforcement learning. Together, this collection of glial enhancer-AAVs will enable characterization of astrocyte and oligodendrocyte populations and their roles across species, disease states, and behavioral epochs.

2.
Res Sq ; 2023 May 23.
Article in English | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-37292694

ABSTRACT

Alzheimer's disease (AD) is the most common cause of dementia in older adults. Neuropathological and imaging studies have demonstrated a progressive and stereotyped accumulation of protein aggregates, but the underlying molecular and cellular mechanisms driving AD progression and vulnerable cell populations affected by disease remain coarsely understood. The current study harnesses single cell and spatial genomics tools and knowledge from the BRAIN Initiative Cell Census Network to understand the impact of disease progression on middle temporal gyrus cell types. We used image-based quantitative neuropathology to place 84 donors spanning the spectrum of AD pathology along a continuous disease pseudoprogression score and multiomic technologies to profile single nuclei from each donor, mapping their transcriptomes, epigenomes, and spatial coordinates to a common cell type reference with unprecedented resolution. Temporal analysis of cell-type proportions indicated an early reduction of Somatostatin-expressing neuronal subtypes and a late decrease of supragranular intratelencephalic-projecting excitatory and Parvalbumin-expressing neurons, with increases in disease-associated microglial and astrocytic states. We found complex gene expression differences, ranging from global to cell type-specific effects. These effects showed different temporal patterns indicating diverse cellular perturbations as a function of disease progression. A subset of donors showed a particularly severe cellular and molecular phenotype, which correlated with steeper cognitive decline. We have created a freely available public resource to explore these data and to accelerate progress in AD research at SEA-AD.org.

3.
Elife ; 122023 05 30.
Article in English | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-37249212

ABSTRACT

Rodent studies have demonstrated that synaptic dynamics from excitatory to inhibitory neuron types are often dependent on the target cell type. However, these target cell-specific properties have not been well investigated in human cortex, where there are major technical challenges in reliably obtaining healthy tissue, conducting multiple patch-clamp recordings on inhibitory cell types, and identifying those cell types. Here, we take advantage of newly developed methods for human neurosurgical tissue analysis with multiple patch-clamp recordings, post-hoc fluorescent in situ hybridization (FISH), machine learning-based cell type classification and prospective GABAergic AAV-based labeling to investigate synaptic properties between pyramidal neurons and PVALB- vs. SST-positive interneurons. We find that there are robust molecular differences in synapse-associated genes between these neuron types, and that individual presynaptic pyramidal neurons evoke postsynaptic responses with heterogeneous synaptic dynamics in different postsynaptic cell types. Using molecular identification with FISH and classifiers based on transcriptomically identified PVALB neurons analyzed by Patch-seq, we find that PVALB neurons typically show depressing synaptic characteristics, whereas other interneuron types including SST-positive neurons show facilitating characteristics. Together, these data support the existence of target cell-specific synaptic properties in human cortex that are similar to rodent, thereby indicating evolutionary conservation of local circuit connectivity motifs from excitatory to inhibitory neurons and their synaptic dynamics.


Subject(s)
Neocortex , Humans , Neocortex/physiology , Synaptic Transmission/physiology , In Situ Hybridization, Fluorescence , Prospective Studies , Neurons/physiology , Pyramidal Cells/physiology , Synapses/physiology , Interneurons/physiology
4.
Cell Rep ; 34(13): 108754, 2021 03 30.
Article in English | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-33789096

ABSTRACT

Viral genetic tools that target specific brain cell types could transform basic neuroscience and targeted gene therapy. Here, we use comparative open chromatin analysis to identify thousands of human-neocortical-subclass-specific putative enhancers from across the genome to control gene expression in adeno-associated virus (AAV) vectors. The cellular specificity of reporter expression from enhancer-AAVs is established by molecular profiling after systemic AAV delivery in mouse. Over 30% of enhancer-AAVs produce specific expression in the targeted subclass, including both excitatory and inhibitory subclasses. We present a collection of Parvalbumin (PVALB) enhancer-AAVs that show highly enriched expression not only in cortical PVALB cells but also in some subcortical PVALB populations. Five vectors maintain PVALB-enriched expression in primate neocortex. These results demonstrate how genome-wide open chromatin data mining and cross-species AAV validation can be used to create the next generation of non-species-restricted viral genetic tools.


Subject(s)
Enhancer Elements, Genetic , Gene Expression Regulation , Neocortex/metabolism , Animals , Chromatin/genetics , Chromatin/metabolism , Databases, Genetic , Dependovirus/genetics , Disease/genetics , Epigenesis, Genetic , Genetic Vectors/metabolism , Genome , Humans , Mice , Neurons/metabolism , Parvalbumins/metabolism , Primates , Species Specificity
5.
Exp Eye Res ; 130: 51-7, 2015 Jan.
Article in English | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-25479044

ABSTRACT

We previously identified Celsr3, an atypical cadherin, as essential for normal inhibitory circuit formation in the inner retina. Its absence during retinal development leads to increases in GABA receptor numbers on ON-bipolar cell terminals and consequent changes in retinal physiology, but does not cause obvious cell spacing or synaptic lamination defects. This study focuses on defining the subset of amacrine cells that express celsr3 during development of the wild type zebrafish retina. We have developed a BAC transgene expressing EGFP under the control of celsr3 promoter, Tg(celsr3:EGFP). Similar to the retinal expression of the endogenous gene, the transgene is expressed in amacrine, ganglion and bipolar, but not horizontal or photoreceptor cells. We transiently expressed the BAC in zebrafish larvae and categorized 104 celsr3 expressing amacrine cells based on their shape, arborization and lamination. Ten different amacrine cell types express Tg(celsr3:EGFP). These include narrow, medium and wide-field types of varicose cells. There are many multistratified cells, including one not previously identified and a few specific types of monostratified amacrine cells. Non-varicose amacrine cells do not express the transgene. We propose that celsr3 expression in varicose amacrine cells is key to this molecule's function in circuitry formation during retinal development. The BAC transgene we have developed provides a useful tool to study Celsr3 function.


Subject(s)
Amacrine Cells/cytology , Amacrine Cells/metabolism , Cadherins/genetics , Gene Expression Regulation/physiology , Zebrafish Proteins/genetics , Animals , Chromosomes, Artificial, Bacterial/genetics , Embryo, Nonmammalian/cytology , Green Fluorescent Proteins/genetics , Immunohistochemistry , Microscopy, Confocal , Promoter Regions, Genetic , RNA, Messenger/genetics , Transgenes , Zebrafish
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