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The Allen Institute is committed to solving mysteries of bioscience — researching the unknown of human biology, in the brain, the cell and the immune system.

Jan 24, 2022, 7 tweets

Different cell types in the brain have their own connectivity rules and patterns. In a recently published study, our #neuroscience researchers took a deep dive into the connectomics of an important but enigmatic cell type, the chandelier cell. 🧵1

📄 elifesciences.org/articles/73783

🔬 💻 Using large-scale #electronmicroscopy with automated segmentation, we mapped the complete axo-axonic input onto pyramidal neurons (1,929 synapses in total, 1,127 from chandelier cells) in a volume of layer 2/3 of mouse visual cortex. #ImagingTheFuture #BrainMapping🧵2

By completely reconstructing the presynaptic chandelier cells, we found a novel principle of connectivity, where a group of interneurons are essentially interchangeable, but their postsynaptic targets individually regulate the amount of input they receive from the population. 🧵3

Meanwhile, @junzhuang3 devised a way to measure the activity of chandelier cells during behavior while @anirban6908 and @BrainiacCostas brought together both structural and functional data to model the impact of chandelier cells on the neurons they target. 🧵4

Beyond the specific discoveries regarding the structure and function of chandelier cells, this work will serve as a framework for how cell-type specific connectivity will be studied with modern methods of anatomy, genetics and modeling. 🧵5

The EM dataset, proofread segmentations, and synaptic connectivity used for this study is fully open and available at microns-explorer.org. #openscience 🧵6

Our EM reconstruction relied heavily on #machinelearning from the @SebastianSeung lab and was produced as part of the @IARPAnews MICrONs program with @AToliasLab. The EM data is fully open and available to browse and download at microns-explorer.org. #openscience 🧵7

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