Kavli Affiliate: Attila Losonczy
| Authors: Jingcheng Shi, Boaz Nutkovich, Dahlia Kushinsky, Bovey Y Rao, Stephanie A Herrlinger, Tiberiu S Mihaila, Katayun Cohen-Kashi Malina, Cliodhna K OToole, Margaret E Conde Paredes, Hyun C Yong, Erdem Varol, Attila Losonczy and Ivo Spiegel
| Summary:
Neural circuits are characterized by genetically and functionally diverse cell types. A mechanistic understanding of circuit function is predicated on linking the genetic and physiological properties of individual neurons. However, it remains highly challenging to map the functional properties of transcriptionally heterogeneous neuronal subtypes in mammalian cortical circuits in vivo. Here, we introduce a high-throughput two-photon nuclear phototagging (2P-NucTag) approach optimized for on-demand and indelible labeling of single neurons via a photoactivatable red fluorescent protein following in vivo functional characterization in behaving mice. We demonstrate the utility of this function-forward pipeline by selectively labeling and transcriptionally profiling previously inaccessible ‘place’ and ‘silent’ cells in the mouse hippocampus. Our results reveal unexpected differences in gene expression between these hippocampal pyramidal neurons with distinct spatial coding properties. Thus, 2P-NucTag opens a new way to uncover the molecular principles that govern the functional organization of neural circuits.