Publications by authors named "Kelsey D Montgomery"

Drugs of abuse activate defined neuronal ensembles in brain reward structures such as the nucleus accumbens (NAc), which are thought to promote the enduring synaptic, circuit, and behavioral consequences of drug exposure. While the molecular and cellular effects arising from experience with drugs like cocaine are increasingly well understood, the mechanisms that sculpt NAc ensemble participation are largely unknown. Here, we leveraged unbiased single-nucleus transcriptional profiling to identify expression of the secreted glycoprotein Reelin (encoded by the gene) as a marker of cocaine-activated neuronal ensembles within the rat NAc.

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  • The study focuses on the molecular organization of the human neocortex, particularly the dorsolateral prefrontal cortex, using advanced spatial transcriptomic technologies.
  • Researchers created a detailed neuroanatomical atlas that highlights different spatial domains based on gene expression patterns, moving beyond traditional histological layers.
  • By integrating data from various sources, the team identified specific cell types and interactions linked to neuropsychiatric disorders, showing how these relate to spatial domains in the brain.
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  • - The study investigates the habenula (Hb) in relation to schizophrenia (SCZD) by examining its cell types and how their transcriptomic profiles differ in individuals with SCZD compared to healthy controls.
  • - Researchers used advanced techniques like single nucleus RNA-sequencing and fluorescent hybridization to identify 17 distinct cell types in the human Hb and validated these findings.
  • - They discovered 45 genes that are differentially expressed in the Hb of SCZD individuals, revealing significant genetic changes and providing new insights into the molecular basis of neuropsychiatric disorders.
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  • - The study focuses on improving the cellular deconvolution of bulk RNA-seq data using single-cell RNA-seq data to estimate cell type composition in diverse tissues, particularly in the human brain.
  • - Researchers created a detailed multi-assay dataset from 22 postmortem human brain samples, employing various RNA-seq methods and comparing estimated cell proportions with actual measurements from other techniques.
  • - The analysis identified specific deconvolution algorithms that performed best, revealing that factors like cell size and differences in gene quantification can impact the accuracy of these methods in reflecting true tissue composition.
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Norepinephrine (NE) neurons in the locus coeruleus (LC) make long-range projections throughout the central nervous system, playing critical roles in arousal and mood, as well as various components of cognition including attention, learning, and memory. The LC-NE system is also implicated in multiple neurological and neuropsychiatric disorders. Importantly, LC-NE neurons are highly sensitive to degeneration in both Alzheimer's and Parkinson's disease.

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We define and identify a new class of control genes for next-generation sequencing called total RNA expression genes (TREGs), which correlate with total RNA abundance in cell types of different sizes and transcriptional activity. We provide a data-driven method to identify TREGs from single-cell RNA sequencing data, allowing the estimation of total amount of RNA when restricted to quantifying a limited number of genes. We demonstrate our method in postmortem human brain using multiplex single-molecule fluorescent in situ hybridization and compare candidate TREGs against classic housekeeping genes.

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Generation of a molecular neuroanatomical map of the human prefrontal cortex reveals novel spatial domains and cell-cell interactions relevant for psychiatric disease. The molecular organization of the human neocortex has been historically studied in the context of its histological layers. However, emerging spatial transcriptomic technologies have enabled unbiased identification of transcriptionally-defined spatial domains that move beyond classic cytoarchitecture.

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Single-cell gene expression technologies are powerful tools to study cell types in the human brain, but efforts have largely focused on cortical brain regions. We therefore created a single-nucleus RNA-sequencing resource of 70,615 high-quality nuclei to generate a molecular taxonomy of cell types across five human brain regions that serve as key nodes of the human brain reward circuitry: nucleus accumbens, amygdala, subgenual anterior cingulate cortex, hippocampus, and dorsolateral prefrontal cortex. We first identified novel subpopulations of interneurons and medium spiny neurons (MSNs) in the nucleus accumbens and further characterized robust GABAergic inhibitory cell populations in the amygdala.

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