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Publication : Regional, Layer, and Cell-Type-Specific Connectivity of the Mouse Default Mode Network.

First Author  Whitesell JD Year  2021
Journal  Neuron Volume  109
Issue  3 Pages  545-559.e8
PubMed ID  33290731 Mgi Jnum  J:343293
Mgi Id  MGI:6707191 Doi  10.1016/j.neuron.2020.11.011
Citation  Whitesell JD, et al. (2021) Regional, Layer, and Cell-Type-Specific Connectivity of the Mouse Default Mode Network. Neuron 109(3):545-559.e8
abstractText  The evolutionarily conserved default mode network (DMN) is a distributed set of brain regions coactivated during resting states that is vulnerable to brain disorders. How disease affects the DMN is unknown, but detailed anatomical descriptions could provide clues. Mice offer an opportunity to investigate structural connectivity of the DMN across spatial scales with cell-type resolution. We co-registered maps from functional magnetic resonance imaging and axonal tracing experiments into the 3D Allen mouse brain reference atlas. We find that the mouse DMN consists of preferentially interconnected cortical regions. As a population, DMN layer 2/3 (L2/3) neurons project almost exclusively to other DMN regions, whereas L5 neurons project in and out of the DMN. In the retrosplenial cortex, a core DMN region, we identify two L5 projection types differentiated by in- or out-DMN targets, laminar position, and gene expression. These results provide a multi-scale description of the anatomical correlates of the mouse DMN.
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