Deutsch David, Matsliah Arie, Wang Kaiyu, Dorkenwald Sven, Mondal Arpita, Burke Austin, Hebditch James, Gager Jay, Yu Szi-Chieh, Sterling Amy, McKellar Claire, Schlegel Philipp, Gerhard Stephan, Sterne Gabriella, Costa Marta, Eichler Katharina, Yin Yijie, Gregory S X E, Dickson Barry, Seung H Sebastian, Murthy Mala
Department of Neurobiology, University of Haifa, Haifa, Israel.
Princeton Neuroscience Institute, Princeton University, Princeton, NJ, USA.
Res Sq. 2025 Jun 26:rs.3.rs-6881911. doi: 10.21203/rs.3.rs-6881911/v1.
Sexual dimorphisms are present across brains. Male and female brains contain sets of cell types with differences in cell number, morphology, or synaptic connectivity between the two sexes. These differences are driven by differentially-expressed transcription factors, which set the stage for disparate sexual and social behaviors observed between males and females, such as courtship, aggression, receptivity, and mating. In the brain, sexual dimorphisms result from differential expression of two transcription factors, Fruitless (Fru) and Doublesex (Dsx), and genetic reagents driven by enhancers for Fru and Dsx label sexually-dimorphic neurons in both male and female brains. The recent release of the first whole-brain connectome for provides a unique opportunity to study the connectivity between these neurons as well as their integration into the larger brain network. Here, we identify 91 putative Fru or Dsx cell types, comprising ~1400 neurons, within the whole-brain connectome, using morphological similarity between electron microscopic (EM) reconstructions and light microscopic (LM) images of known Fru and Dsx neurons. We discover that while Fru and Dsx neurons are highly interconnected, each cell type typically receives more inputs from and sends more outputs to non-Fru/Dsx neurons. We characterize the connectivity in the Fru/Dsx networks to predict the function of cell types not previously characterized, we measure distances to the sensory periphery and uncover multisensory interactions, and we map connections to descending neurons that drive behavior. All Fru and Dsx labels reported here are shared within FlyWire Codex (codex.flywire.ai; gene==Fruitless or Doublesex); this work is a critical first step towards deciphering the neural basis of sexually-dimorphic behaviors and for making comparisons with future connectomes of the male brain.
性二态性存在于整个大脑中。雄性和雌性大脑包含不同的细胞类型,两性之间在细胞数量、形态或突触连接性上存在差异。这些差异由差异表达的转录因子驱动,为雄性和雌性之间观察到的不同的性行为和社会行为奠定了基础,例如求偶、攻击、接受和交配。在大脑中,性二态性源于两种转录因子无果(Fru)和双性(Dsx)的差异表达,由Fru和Dsx增强子驱动的遗传试剂标记了雄性和雌性大脑中的性二态神经元。最近发布的首个完整大脑连接组提供了一个独特的机会来研究这些神经元之间的连接以及它们如何融入更大的大脑网络。在这里,我们利用已知Fru和Dsx神经元的电子显微镜(EM)重建与光学显微镜(LM)图像之间的形态相似性,在完整大脑连接组中识别出91种假定的Fru或Dsx细胞类型,包括约1400个神经元。我们发现,虽然Fru和Dsx神经元高度相互连接,但每种细胞类型通常从非Fru/Dsx神经元接收更多输入并向其发送更多输出。我们表征Fru/Dsx网络中的连接性以预测先前未表征的细胞类型的功能,测量到感觉外周的距离并揭示多感官相互作用,并且我们绘制与驱动行为的下行神经元的连接。这里报告的所有Fru和Dsx标记在FlyWire Codex(codex.flywire.ai;基因==无果或双性)中是共享的;这项工作是破译性二态行为的神经基础以及与未来雄性大脑连接组进行比较的关键第一步。