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Publication : Functional sensory circuits built from neurons of two species.

First Author  Throesch BT Year  2024
Journal  Cell Volume  187
Issue  9 Pages  2143-2157.e15
PubMed ID  38670072 Mgi Jnum  J:347795
Mgi Id  MGI:7627869 Doi  10.1016/j.cell.2024.03.042
Citation  Throesch BT, et al. (2024) Functional sensory circuits built from neurons of two species. Cell 187(9):2143-2157.e15
abstractText  A central question for regenerative neuroscience is whether synthetic neural circuits, such as those built from two species, can function in an intact brain. Here, we apply blastocyst complementation to selectively build and test interspecies neural circuits. Despite approximately 10-20 million years of evolution, and prominent species differences in brain size, rat pluripotent stem cells injected into mouse blastocysts develop and persist throughout the mouse brain. Unexpectedly, the mouse niche reprograms the birth dates of rat neurons in the cortex and hippocampus, supporting rat-mouse synaptic activity. When mouse olfactory neurons are genetically silenced or killed, rat neurons restore information flow to odor processing circuits. Moreover, they rescue the primal behavior of food seeking, although less well than mouse neurons. By revealing that a mouse can sense the world using neurons from another species, we establish neural blastocyst complementation as a powerful tool to identify conserved mechanisms of brain development, plasticity, and repair.
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