Neuron
Volume 91, Issue 5, 7 September 2016, Pages 975-987
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High-Throughput Mapping of Single-Neuron Projections by Sequencing of Barcoded RNA

https://doi.org/10.1016/j.neuron.2016.07.036Get rights and content
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Highlights

  • Single-neuron projections can provide insight into inter-areal information flow

  • Exploiting the speed of DNA sequencing allows high-throughput single-neuron tracing

  • Using MAPseq, thousands of single-neuron projections can be mapped in 1 week

  • Individual locus coeruleus neurons have idiosyncratic projection patterns

Summary

Neurons transmit information to distant brain regions via long-range axonal projections. In the mouse, area-to-area connections have only been systematically mapped using bulk labeling techniques, which obscure the diverse projections of intermingled single neurons. Here we describe MAPseq (Multiplexed Analysis of Projections by Sequencing), a technique that can map the projections of thousands or even millions of single neurons by labeling large sets of neurons with random RNA sequences (“barcodes”). Axons are filled with barcode mRNA, each putative projection area is dissected, and the barcode mRNA is extracted and sequenced. Applying MAPseq to the locus coeruleus (LC), we find that individual LC neurons have preferred cortical targets. By recasting neuroanatomy, which is traditionally viewed as a problem of microscopy, as a problem of sequencing, MAPseq harnesses advances in sequencing technology to permit high-throughput interrogation of brain circuits.

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