The Mouse Cortical Connectome, Characterized by an Ultra-Dense Cortical Graph, Maintains Specificity by Distinct Connectivity Profiles

The inter-areal wiring pattern of the mouse cerebral cortex was analyzed in relation to a refined parcellation of cortical areas. Twenty-seven retrograde tracer injections were made in 19 areas of a 47-area parcellation of the mouse neocortex. Flat mounts of the cortex and multiple histological mark...

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Veröffentlicht in:Neuron (Cambridge, Mass.) Mass.), 2018-02, Vol.97 (3), p.698-715.e10
Hauptverfasser: Gămănuţ, Răzvan, Kennedy, Henry, Toroczkai, Zoltán, Ercsey-Ravasz, Mária, Van Essen, David C., Knoblauch, Kenneth, Burkhalter, Andreas
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container_title Neuron (Cambridge, Mass.)
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creator Gămănuţ, Răzvan
Kennedy, Henry
Toroczkai, Zoltán
Ercsey-Ravasz, Mária
Van Essen, David C.
Knoblauch, Kenneth
Burkhalter, Andreas
description The inter-areal wiring pattern of the mouse cerebral cortex was analyzed in relation to a refined parcellation of cortical areas. Twenty-seven retrograde tracer injections were made in 19 areas of a 47-area parcellation of the mouse neocortex. Flat mounts of the cortex and multiple histological markers enabled detailed counts of labeled neurons in individual areas. The observed log-normal distribution of connection weights to each cortical area spans 5 orders of magnitude and reveals a distinct connectivity profile for each area, analogous to that observed in macaques. The cortical network has a density of 97%, considerably higher than the 66% density reported in macaques. A weighted graph analysis reveals a similar global efficiency but weaker spatial clustering compared with that reported in macaques. The consistency, precision of the connectivity profile, density, and weighted graph analysis of the present data differ significantly from those obtained in earlier studies in the mouse. •Retrograde tracer injections are restricted to single areas in mouse cortex•Individual areal maps for each brain are used for location of labeled neurons•97% of all possible cortico-cortical connections exist•Areas are characterized by weight-specific connectivity profiles Gămănuţ et al. investigate anatomical cortico-cortical connections in the mouse at the meso-scale level and show that almost all possible connections exist. Efficiency of the network and specificity of the connections are ensured by the existence of weighted connectivity profiles.
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subjects anatomy
Brain
Cerebral cortex
connectivity
log-normal
neocortex
Neural networks
retrograde
rodent
Rodents
Spatial distribution
Studies
tract-tracing
title The Mouse Cortical Connectome, Characterized by an Ultra-Dense Cortical Graph, Maintains Specificity by Distinct Connectivity Profiles
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