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While single-cell technologies have greatly advanced our comprehension of human brain cell types and functions, studies including large numbers of donors and multiple brain regions are needed to extend our understanding of brain cell heterogeneity. Integrating atlas-level single-cell data presents a chance to reveal rare cell types and cellular heterogeneity across brain regions. Here we present the Brain Cell Atlas, a comprehensive reference atlas of brain cells, by assembling single-cell data from 70 human and 103 mouse studies of the brain throughout major developmental stages across brain regions, covering over 26.3 million cells or nuclei from both healthy and diseased tissues. Using machine-learning based algorithms, the Brain Cell Atlas provides a consensus cell type annotation, and it showcases the identification of putative neural progenitor cells and a cell subpopulation of PCDH9
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Xinyue Chen
The University of Texas MD Anderson Cancer Center
Yin Huang
Guangzhou Experimental Station
Liang‐Feng Huang
Chinese Academy of Sciences
Nature Medicine
Tsinghua University
Sun Yat-sen University
Tongji University
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Chen et al. (Fri,) studied this question.
synapsesocial.com/papers/68e5d9deb6db64358756f72b — DOI: https://doi.org/10.1038/s41591-024-03150-z
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