Nightsong
Senior Member (Voting Rights)
I've been skimming through a few papers on eMSNs/eSPNs. A few brief notes so far:
Their existence seems to have been first highlighted in this 2018 paper (link) that profiled ~690k cells and identified a rare spiny projection neuron population in the striatum.
This interesting review from 2021 (link) gives a possible reason for them having been overlooked:
A 2024 paper in PNAS (link) on Parkinson's reports high relative LRRK2 RNA in direct, indirect, and eccentric spiny neurons.
From this 2022 paper (link) - (". . . imply that the LGE_FOXP2/TSHZ1 initial class also explains the previously unknown developmental origin of recently described striatal projection neurons in adult mice, eccentric spiny projection neurons (eSPNs) and amygdala ITCs")
Two papers using the Siletti human brain atlas (Duncan et al (link); Yao et al (link)) make a link to schizophrenia. Duncan et al relates that eMSNs are rare, transcriptomically distinct, and not reliably separated by classical D1/D2 markers.
Their existence seems to have been first highlighted in this 2018 paper (link) that profiled ~690k cells and identified a rare spiny projection neuron population in the striatum.
This interesting review from 2021 (link) gives a possible reason for them having been overlooked:
The Human Protein Atlas (link) lists a brain-neuron cluster annotated as "eccentric medium spiny neurons GAD1/GAD2 (CXCL14+ DRD1+ ADARB2+)".Some of the eSPN markers encompass genes typically used to distinguish iSPNs and dSPNs, such as Adora2a and Drd1, which likely explains why this population was overlooked so far.
A 2024 paper in PNAS (link) on Parkinson's reports high relative LRRK2 RNA in direct, indirect, and eccentric spiny neurons.
From this 2022 paper (link) - (". . . imply that the LGE_FOXP2/TSHZ1 initial class also explains the previously unknown developmental origin of recently described striatal projection neurons in adult mice, eccentric spiny projection neurons (eSPNs) and amygdala ITCs")
Two papers using the Siletti human brain atlas (Duncan et al (link); Yao et al (link)) make a link to schizophrenia. Duncan et al relates that eMSNs are rare, transcriptomically distinct, and not reliably separated by classical D1/D2 markers.
