← Return to All Projects

Organizing principles of astrocytic nanoarchitecture in the mouse cerebral cortex

Graphical Abstract Astrocyte

Figure: Schematic illustration of hierarchical organisation of astrocytes into exapansions, constrictions and cores with specialised hubs and organisation of synapses into astrocyte-defined clusters around the astrocytic branches.

Astrocytes are increasingly understood to be important regulators of central nervous system (CNS) function in health and disease; yet, we have little quantitative understanding of their complex architecture. While broad categories of astrocytic structures are known, the discrete building blocks that compose them, along with their geometry and organizing principles, are poorly understood. Quantitative investigation of astrocytic complexity is impeded by the absence of high-resolution datasets and robust computational approaches to analyze these intricate cells. To address this, we produced four ultra-high-resolution datasets of mouse cerebral cortex using serial electron microscopy and developed astrocyte-tailored computer vision methods for accurate structural analysis. We unearthed specific anatomical building blocks, structural motifs, connectivity hubs, and hierarchical organizations of astrocytes. Furthermore, we found that astrocytes interact with discrete clusters of synapses and that astrocytic mitochondria are distributed to lie closer to larger clusters of synapses. Our findings provide a geometrically principled, quantitative understanding of astrocytic nanoarchitecture and point to an unexpected level of complexity in how astrocytes interact with CNS microanatomy.


See publication online here See McGill Science article here

Video Submission to Current Biology Journal, 2023




Related Publications

Salmon CK, Syed TA, Kacerovsky JB, Alivodej N, Schober AL, Sloan TFW, Pratte MT, Rosen MP, Green M, Chirgwin-Dasgupta A, Mehta S, Jilani A, Wang Y, Vali H, Mandato CA, Siddiqi K, Murai KK. Organizing principles of astrocytic nanoarchitecture in the mouse cerebral cortex. Curr Biol. 2023 Mar 13;33(5):957-972.e5. doi: 10.1016/j.cub.2023.01.043. Epub 2023 Feb 16. PMID: 36805126.