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  4. Of mice and men: Increased dendritic complexity gives rise to unique human networks
 
preprint

Of mice and men: Increased dendritic complexity gives rise to unique human networks

Kanari, Lida  
•
Shi, Ying  
•
Arnaudon, Alexis  
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January 22, 2024

The organizational principles that distinguish the human brain from those of other species have been a long-standing enigma in neuroscience. Here, we leverage advances in algebraic topology to uncover the structural properties of the human brain at subcellular resolution. First, we reveal a much higher perisomatic branching density in pyramidal neurons when comparing homologous cortical regions in humans and mice. Traditional scaling methods consistently fail to interpret this difference, suggesting a distinctive feature of human pyramidal neurons. We next show that topological complexity leads to highly interconnected pyramidal-to-pyramidal and higher-order networks, which is unexpected in view of reduced neuronal density in humans compared to mouse neocortex. We thus present robust evidence that reduced neuronal density but increased topological complexity in human neurons ultimately leads to highly interconnected cortical networks. The dendritic complexity, which is a defining attribute of human brain networks, may serve as the foundation of enhanced computational capacity and cognitive flexibility.

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Type
preprint
DOI
10.1101/2023.09.11.557170
Author(s)
Kanari, Lida  
Shi, Ying  
Arnaudon, Alexis  
Barros Zulaica, Natali  
Benavides-Piccione, Ruth
Coggan, Jay  
DeFelipe, Javier
Hess Bellwald, Kathryn  
Mansvelder, Huib D.
Mertens, Eline J.
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Date Issued

2024-01-22

Publisher

bioRxiv

Subjects

Human

•

Rodent

•

Mouse

•

Neuron morphology

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Topological complexity

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Net- works

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Pyramidal cell

URL
https://github.com/BlueBrain/TMD
https://github.com/BlueBrain/NeuroM
Editorial or Peer reviewed

NON-REVIEWED

Written at

EPFL

EPFL units
BBP-CORE  
FunderFunding(s)Grant NumberGrant URL

Board of the Swiss Federal Institutes of Technology

Blue Brain Project

Available on Infoscience
September 22, 2023
Use this identifier to reference this record
https://infoscience.epfl.ch/handle/20.500.14299/200912
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