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Blue Brain Project releases first-ever digital 3D brain cell atlas

Date:
November 28, 2018
Source:
Frontiers
Summary:
The Blue Brain Cell Atlas is like 'going from hand-drawn maps to Google Earth' -- providing previously unavailable information on major cell types, numbers and positions in all 737 brain regions. This comprehensive, interactive and dynamic online resource allows anyone to visualize every region in the mouse brain, cell-by-cell and in 3D, and freely download data for new analyses and modelling. It can also be continuously be updated with new findings.
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The first digital 3D atlas of every cell in the mouse brain provides neuroscientists with previously unavailable information on major cell types, numbers and positions in all 737 brain regions -- which will potentially accelerate progress in brain science massively. Released by EPFL's Blue Brain Project and published in Frontiers in Computational Neuroscience, the Blue Brain Cell Atlas integrates data from thousands of whole brain tissue stains into a comprehensive, interactive and dynamic online resource that can continuously be updated with new findings. This groundbreaking digital atlas can be used for analyzing and further modeling specific brain areas, and is a major step toward a full simulation of the rodent brain.

"Despite vast numbers of studies over the past century, cell numbers were still only available for 4% of mouse brain regions -- and these estimates often varied by as much as three-fold," says Blue Brain Project Founder and Director, Professor Henry Markram. "The Blue Brain Cell Atlas solves this problem by presenting the best estimates for even the smallest-known region of the mouse brain."

"Knowing the circuit components and how they are arranged is also an essential starting point for modelling the brain -- just as demographic data are essential for modelling a country, for example," explains lead author and creator of the Cell Atlas, Csaba Erö.

Previous brain atlases consist of stacks of images of stained brain slices. Some show precise cell positions for the entire brain, while others show particular cell types -- but none turns this valuable data into numbers and positions of all the cells in the brain in the form of a digitally navigable atlas.

This revolutionary step took five years of carefully collecting and integrating thousands of stainings of brain tissue. Erö and colleagues relied mostly on all the imaging data made available from the Allen Institute for Brain Science and combined this with a large number of other anatomical studies to calculate and validate the major types, numbers, and positions of cells in each area of the mouse brain -- including all the regions where cell data was never obtained before.

"Our Cell Atlas is like going from hand-drawn maps to digitized versions of satellite images of cities and geographical features -- allowing us to navigate the brain the way Google Earth allows us to navigate the Earth," says Blue Brain Section Manager, Marc-Oliver Gewaltig. "It's 3D, it's high resolution, it's searchable, it's navigable, it's annotated, it's user-friendly -- and it fills a huge gap in our knowledge of 96% of the mouse's brain regions."

Freely available online, the Blue Brain Cell Atlas allows users to visualize all 737 brain regions and the cells they contain, and to download the region with their numbers and locations. It distinguishes excitatory, inhibitory and some other types of neurons -- as well as major types of non-neuronal cells called glia, which insulate and protect neurons. These data are important for researchers trying to understand the structure and function of different brain regions or for building functional models of specific brain regions.

"It is also a great teaching aid: you can choose to display just the regions of interest and navigate through these down to the scale of individual cells, which are color-coded by the type of their morphology," adds Gewaltig.

The Blue Brain Cell Atlas is also the first brain atlas that is dynamic -- allowing researchers to contribute to and improve the atlas with any new data. "We can now move collaboratively towards the ground truth of what is inside the mouse brain," explains Markram.

"Our message to brain researchers everywhere is: try it, use it, add data to it," conclude the authors.

About EPFL's Blue Brain Project

The aim of the EPFL's Blue Brain Project (bluebrain.epfl.ch), a Swiss brain initiative founded and directed by Professor Henry Markram, is to build accurate, biologically detailed digital reconstructions and simulations of the rodent brain, and ultimately, the human brain. The supercomputer-based reconstructions and simulations built by Blue Brain offer a radically new approach for understanding the multilevel structure and function of the brain.


Story Source:

Materials provided by Frontiers. Note: Content may be edited for style and length.


Journal Reference:

  1. Csaba Erö, Marc-Oliver Gewaltig, Daniel Keller, Henry Markram. A Cell Atlas for the Mouse Brain. Frontiers in Neuroinformatics, 2018; 12 DOI: 10.3389/fninf.2018.00084

Cite This Page:

Frontiers. "Blue Brain Project releases first-ever digital 3D brain cell atlas." ScienceDaily. ScienceDaily, 28 November 2018. <www.sciencedaily.com/releases/2018/11/181128082718.htm>.
Frontiers. (2018, November 28). Blue Brain Project releases first-ever digital 3D brain cell atlas. ScienceDaily. Retrieved March 28, 2024 from www.sciencedaily.com/releases/2018/11/181128082718.htm
Frontiers. "Blue Brain Project releases first-ever digital 3D brain cell atlas." ScienceDaily. www.sciencedaily.com/releases/2018/11/181128082718.htm (accessed March 28, 2024).

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