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Showing 1–11 of 11 results
Advanced filters: Author: Tim Dolbeare Clear advanced filters
  • Long-distance migration and dispersion is a common characteristic of nearly all classes of telencephalic GABAergic neurons, which diversify extensively after birth in the cortex and striatum, but show limited postnatal changes in the septum, preoptic area and pallidum.

    • Cindy T. J. van Velthoven
    • Yuan Gao
    • Hongkui Zeng
    ResearchOpen Access
    Nature
    Volume: 647, P: 143-156
  • The affected cellular populations during Alzheimer’s disease progression remain understudied. Here the authors use a cohort of 84 donors, quantitative neuropathology and multimodal datasets from the BRAIN Initiative. Their pseudoprogression analysis revealed two disease phases.

    • Mariano I. Gabitto
    • Kyle J. Travaglini
    • Ed S. Lein
    ResearchOpen Access
    Nature Neuroscience
    Volume: 27, P: 2366-2383
  • A spatially resolved transcriptional atlas of the mid-gestational developing human brain has been created using laser-capture microdissection and microarray technology, providing a comprehensive reference resource which also enables new hypotheses about the nature of human brain evolution and the origins of neurodevelopmental disorders.

    • Jeremy A. Miller
    • Song-Lin Ding
    • Ed S. Lein
    Research
    Nature
    Volume: 508, P: 199-206
  • The expression of each of the roughly 22,000 genes of the mouse genome has been mapped, at cellular resolution, across all major structures of the mouse brain, revealing that 80% of all genes appear to be expressed in the brain.

    • Ed S. Lein
    • Michael J. Hawrylycz
    • Allan R. Jones
    Research
    Nature
    Volume: 445, P: 168-176
  •  A transcriptomic cell-type atlas of the whole adult mouse brain with ~5,300 clusters built from single-cell and spatial transcriptomic datasets with more than eight million cells reveals remarkable cell type diversity across the brain and unique cell type characteristics of different brain regions. 

    • Zizhen Yao
    • Cindy T. J. van Velthoven
    • Hongkui Zeng
    ResearchOpen Access
    Nature
    Volume: 624, P: 317-332
  • A high-resolution gene expression atlas of prenatal and postnatal brain development of rhesus monkey charts global transcriptional dynamics in relation to brain maturation, while comparative analysis reveals human-specific gene trajectories; candidate risk genes associated with human neurodevelopmental disorders tend to be co-expressed in disease-specific patterns in the developing monkey neocortex.

    • Trygve E. Bakken
    • Jeremy A. Miller
    • Ed S. Lein
    Research
    Nature
    Volume: 535, P: 367-375
  • Laser microdissection and microarrays are used to assess 900 precise subdivisions of the brains from three healthy men with 60,000 gene expression probes; the resulting atlas allows comparisons between humans and other animals, and will facilitate studies of human neurological and psychiatric diseases.

    • Michael J. Hawrylycz
    • Ed S. Lein
    • Allan R. Jones
    Research
    Nature
    Volume: 489, P: 391-399
  • Mammalian cortex comprises a variety of cells, but the extent of this cellular diversity is unknown. The authors defined cell types in the primary visual cortex of adult mice using single-cell transcriptomics. This revealed 49 cell types, including 23 GABAergic, 19 glutamatergic and 7 non-neuronal types.

    • Bosiljka Tasic
    • Vilas Menon
    • Hongkui Zeng
    Research
    Nature Neuroscience
    Volume: 19, P: 335-346
  • The authors applied a correlation-based metric, ‘differential stability’ (DS), to assess reproducibility of gene expression patterning across individual brains, revealing mesoscale genetic organization. The highest DS genes were enriched for brain-related biological annotations, disease associations and drug targets, and their anatomical expression pattern correlated with resting state functional connectivity.

    • Michael Hawrylycz
    • Jeremy A Miller
    • Ed Lein
    Research
    Nature Neuroscience
    Volume: 18, P: 1832-1844