A marmoset brain cell census reveals influence of developmental origin and functional class on neuronal identity
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CC-BY-NC-ND-4.0
Abstract
The mammalian brain is composed of many brain structures, each with its own ontogenetic and developmental history. Transcriptionally-based cell type taxonomies reveal cell type composition and similarity relationships within and across brain structures. We sampled over 2.4 million brain cells across 18 locations in the common marmoset, a New World monkey primed for genetic engineering, and used single-nucleus RNA sequencing to examine global gene expression patterns of cell types within and across brain structures. Our results indicate that there is generally a high degree of transcriptional similarity between GABAergic and glutamatergic neurons found in the same brain structure, and there are generally few shared molecular features between neurons that utilize the same neurotransmitter but reside in different brain structures. We also show that in many cases the transcriptional identities of cells are intrinsically retained from their birthplaces, even when they migrate beyond their cephalic compartments. Thus, the adult transcriptomic identity of most neuronal types appears to be shaped much more by their developmental identity than by their primary neurotransmitter signaling repertoire. Using quantitative mapping of single molecule FISH (smFISH) for markers for GABAergic interneurons, we found that the similar types (e.g. PVALB + interneurons) have distinct biodistributions in the striatum and neocortex. Interneuron types follow medio-lateral gradients in striatum but form complex distributions across the neocortex that are not described by simple gradients. Lateral prefrontal areas in marmoset are distinguished by high relative proportions of VIP + neurons. We further used cell-type-specific enhancer driven AAV-GFP to visualize the morphology of molecularly-resolved interneuron classes in neocortex and striatum, including the previously discovered novel primate-specific TAC3+ striatal interneurons. Our comprehensive analyses highlight how lineage and functional class contribute to the transcriptional identity and biodistribution of primate brain cell types. One-Sentence Summary Adult primate neurons are imprinted by their region of origin, more so than by their functional identity.
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- europepmc
- last seen: 2026-05-19T01:45:01.086888+00:00
- unpaywall
- last seen: 2026-05-22T02:00:06.705733+00:00
License: CC-BY-NC-ND-4.0