Litcius/Paper detail

Cellular-resolution gene expression profiling in the neonatal marmoset brain reveals dynamic species- and region-specific differences

Yoshiaki Kita, Hirozumi Nishibe, Yan Wang, Tsutomu Hashikawa, Satomi Kikuchi, U Mami, Aya Yoshida, Chihiro Yoshida, Takashi Kawase, Shin Ishii, Henrik Skibbe, Tomomi Shimogori

2021Proceedings of the National Academy of Sciences54 citationsDOIOpen Access PDF

Abstract

Precise spatiotemporal control of gene expression in the developing brain is critical for neural circuit formation, and comprehensive expression mapping in the developing primate brain is crucial to understand brain function in health and disease. Here, we developed an unbiased, automated, large-scale, cellular-resolution in situ hybridization (ISH)-based gene expression profiling system (GePS) and companion analysis to reveal gene expression patterns in the neonatal New World marmoset cortex, thalamus, and striatum that are distinct from those in mice. Gene-ontology analysis of marmoset-specific genes revealed associations with catalytic activity in the visual cortex and neuropsychiatric disorders in the thalamus. Cortically expressed genes with clear area boundaries were used in a three-dimensional cortical surface mapping algorithm to delineate higher-order cortical areas not evident in two-dimensional ISH data. GePS provides a powerful platform to elucidate the molecular mechanisms underlying primate neurobiology and developmental psychiatric and neurological disorders.

Topics & Concepts

MarmosetBiologyGene expressionGeneGene expression profilingRegulation of gene expressionGeneticsComputational biologyPaleontologySingle-cell and spatial transcriptomicsGene expression and cancer classificationNeuroinflammation and Neurodegeneration Mechanisms