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Neuronal cell types in the fly: single-cell anatomy meets single-cell genomics.

Accepted version
Peer-reviewed

Type

Article

Change log

Authors

Bates, Alexander Shakeel 
Janssens, Jasper 
Jefferis, Gregory Sxe 
Aerts, Stein 

Abstract

At around 150 000 neurons, the adult Drosophila melanogaster central nervous system is one of the largest species, for which a complete cellular catalogue is imminent. While numerically much simpler than mammalian brains, its complexity is still difficult to parse without grouping neurons into consistent types, which can number 1-1000 cells per hemisphere. We review how neuroanatomical and gene expression data are being used to discover neuronal types at scale. The correlation among multiple co-varying neuronal properties, including lineage, gene expression, morphology, connectivity, response properties and shared behavioral significance is essential to the definition of neuronal cell type. Initial studies comparing morphological and transcriptomic definitions of neuronal type suggest that these are highly consistent, but there is much to do to match these approaches brain-wide. Matched single-cell transcriptomic and morphological data provide an effective reference point to integrate other data types, including connectomics data. This will significantly enhance our ability to make functional predictions from brain wiring diagrams as well facilitating molecular genetic manipulation of neuronal types.

Description

Keywords

Animals, Brain, Connectome, Drosophila melanogaster, Genomics, Neurons

Journal Title

Curr Opin Neurobiol

Conference Name

Journal ISSN

0959-4388
1873-6882

Volume Title

56

Publisher

Elsevier BV
Sponsorship
Wellcome Trust (203261/Z/16/Z)
European Research Council (649111)