Lerner Talia N, Ye Li, Deisseroth Karl
Bioengineering Department, 318 Campus Drive, Stanford University, Stanford, CA 94305, USA.
Bioengineering Department, 318 Campus Drive, Stanford University, Stanford, CA 94305, USA; Psychiatry Department, 318 Campus Drive, Stanford University, Stanford, CA 94305, USA; Howard Hughes Medical Institute, 318 Campus Drive, Stanford University, Stanford, CA 94305, USA.
Cell. 2016 Mar 10;164(6):1136-1150. doi: 10.1016/j.cell.2016.02.027.
Communication, the effective delivery of information, is fundamental to life across all scales and species. Nervous systems (by necessity) may be most specifically adapted among biological tissues for high rate and complexity of information transmitted, and thus, the properties of neural tissue and principles of its organization into circuits may illuminate capabilities and limitations of biological communication. Here, we consider recent developments in tools for studying neural circuits with particular attention to defining neuronal cell types by input and output information streams--i.e., by how they communicate. Complementing approaches that define cell types by virtue of genetic promoter/enhancer properties, this communication-based approach to defining cell types operationally by input/output (I/O) relationships links structure and function, resolves difficulties associated with single-genetic-feature definitions, leverages technology for observing and testing significance of precisely these I/O relationships in intact brains, and maps onto processes through which behavior may be adapted during development, experience, and evolution.
通讯,即信息的有效传递,是所有尺度和物种生命的基础。在生物组织中,神经系统(必然地)可能是最特别适应于高信息传输速率和复杂性的,因此,神经组织的特性及其组织成回路的原理可能会阐明生物通讯的能力和局限性。在这里,我们考虑研究神经回路的工具的最新进展,特别关注通过输入和输出信息流(即它们如何通讯)来定义神经元细胞类型。这种基于通讯的方法通过输入/输出(I/O)关系在操作上定义细胞类型,与凭借遗传启动子/增强子特性定义细胞类型的方法相辅相成,它将结构与功能联系起来,解决了与单基因特征定义相关的困难,利用技术来观察和测试这些I/O关系在完整大脑中的重要性,并映射到在发育、经验和进化过程中行为可能被调整适应的过程。