Nature Communications (Feb 2024)

Unsupervised classification of brain-wide axons reveals the presubiculum neuronal projection blueprint

  • Diek W. Wheeler,
  • Shaina Banduri,
  • Sruthi Sankararaman,
  • Samhita Vinay,
  • Giorgio A. Ascoli

DOI
https://doi.org/10.1038/s41467-024-45741-x
Journal volume & issue
Vol. 15, no. 1
pp. 1 – 14

Abstract

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Abstract We present a quantitative strategy to identify all projection neuron types from a given region with statistically different patterns of anatomical targeting. We first validate the technique with mouse primary motor cortex layer 6 data, yielding two clusters consistent with cortico-thalamic and intra-telencephalic neurons. We next analyze the presubiculum, a less-explored region, identifying five classes of projecting neurons with unique patterns of divergence, convergence, and specificity. We report several findings: individual classes target multiple subregions along defined functions; all hypothalamic regions are exclusively targeted by the same class also invading midbrain and agranular retrosplenial cortex; Cornu Ammonis receives input from a single class of presubicular axons also projecting to granular retrosplenial cortex; path distances from the presubiculum to the same targets differ significantly between classes, as do the path distances to distinct targets within most classes; the identified classes have highly non-uniform abundances; and presubicular somata are topographically segregated among classes. This study thus demonstrates that statistically distinct projections shed light on the functional organization of their circuit.