The cerebral cortex proteomeCerebral cortex is the largest region of the human brain and its main function is information processing. Subregions of the cerebral corex are important for generating voluntary motor output, processing of sensory information or are involved in cognitive functions. The cerebral cortex is the dorsal part of the forebrain (telencephalon) and mainly consists of excitatory pyramidal projection neurons organized in 6 distinct layers and inhibitory interneurons that form local networks. The cerebral cortex acts as a relay system, information from subcortical regions is filtered and only selected information is projected back to subcortical regions that generate the behavioral output. Many of the human higher cognitive abilities depend on this brain structure and neurodegenerative disease (e.g. Alzheimer's disease) or developmental abnormalities affecting the cerebral cortex often result in cognitive impairments. Regional expression in the mammalian cerebral cortexThe transcriptome analysis shows that 85% (n=16646) of all human protein-coding genes (n=19670) are expressed in the human cerebral cortex. Human one-to-one orthologues were investigated in pig and mouse brain, suggesting that 11705 of all mouse one-to-one orthologues (n=15160) are expressed in the mouse cerebral cortex and that 12398 of all pig orthologues (n=14656) are expressed in the pig cerebral cortex.
Figure 1. Schematic drawing of the human brain, indicating the location of cerebral cortex from a sagittal view. Detailed transcriptomic analysis of the human prefrontal cortexThe mammalian frontal lobe contains the motor, pre-motor and prefrontal areas. From all cortical regions the human prefrontal cortex is special and more developed compared to other mammalian species. During evolution, the size of the prefrontal cortex rapidly increased in primates, especially in great apes and humans. This development is associated with specialized higher cognitive functions such as language, attention and complex decision-making involving prediction, imagination and planning. The prefontal cortex is divided in subregions including the dorsolateral, dorsomedial, ventrolateral, ventromedial and orbitofrontal regions. These regions can be further subdivided based on gyrification (folding of the brain) or cellular organization of the cortical layers.
Figure 2. Schematic drawing of the lateral, medial and orbital view of the cerebral cortex outlining the regions of the dorsolater (yellow), ventrolateral (blue), dorsomedial (green), ventromedial (purple) and orbitofrontal parts (orange/red) prefrontal cortex. Subregions that are marked grey are currently not included in the prefrontal cortex dataset.
The dorsomedial prefrontal cortex is involved in social cognition and processing of mental states. This prefrontal cortex subregions includes the medial part of the superior frontal gyrus (SFG) and also the upper portions of the dorsal and ventral anterior cingulate cortex (aCGpd & aCGpv). The ventrolateral prefrontal cortex is involved in decision making by processing the behavioral significance of external events. This part of the prefrontal cortex also contains the Broca areas involved in the production of speech. This prefrontal cortex subregion includes the frontomarginal cortex, the lower part of the medial frontal gyrus (MFG) the orbital part of the inferior frontal gyrus (IFGorb) and the Broca areas, triangular (IFGtr) and opercular (GFGop) parts of the inferior frontal gyrus. The ventromedial prefrontal cortex is important for empathy, making of value-based decision and regulation of negative emotions. This prefrontal cortex subregions contains frontopolar cortex (FP), the rostral gyrus (ROG), the lower dorsal and ventral pregenual (aCGpd & aCGpv) and subgenual (aCGs) part of the anterior cingulate cortex and the subcallosal gyrus (SCG). The orbibtofrontal part of the prefrontal cortex is located just above the eye sockets (orbital bone) and is involved in emotional associative learning involving taste, odor and visual objects. This basal part of the prefrontal cortex gyrus rectus (GR), and the medial (OrGm), anterior (OrGa), posterior (OrGp) and lateral (OrGl) areas of the orbitofrontal gyrus. Regionally elevated expression in human cerebral cortexThe transcriptome analysis shows that 85% (n=16646) of all human proteins (n=19670) are expressed in the cerebral cortex and 152 genes show an elevated expression in cerebral cortex compared to other regions of the brain. Table 1: Number of genes within the different categories of regionally elevated expression, in human cerebral cortex
Elevated expression in cerebral cortex compared to other brain regions is divided into three different categories; regionally enriched (at least four-fold higher mRNA levels in cerebral cortex compared to all other regions), group enriched (at least four-fold higher mRNA levels in a group of 2-5 regions) and regionally enhanced (at least four-fold higher mRNA levels in cerebral cortex compared to the average of all regions), The number of genes in the individual category is shown in Table 1. Very few genes are classified as regionally enriched in cerebral cortex, examples of interesting genes are HTR3B and NPBWR2. Proteins with elevated expression in cerebral cortex compared to all the other brain regions were often group enriched due to the similarity to other forebrain regions. Examples of group enriched expression in cerebral cortex are NPTXR, CDH9 and NRGN Regionally elevated expression in mouse cerebral cortex
Figure 3. Schematic drawing of the mouse brain, indicating the location of cerebral cortex from a sagittal view and a coronal perspective. The transcriptome analysis shows that 11709 of all mouse one-to-one orthologues (n=15160) are expressed in the mouse cerebral cortex and 1 genes are classified as regionally enriched genes and in total 114 regionally elevated. Elevated expression in cerebral cortex compared to other brain regions is divided into three different categories; regionally enriched (at least four-fold higher mRNA levels in cerebral cortex compared to all other regions), group enriched (at least four-fold higher mRNA levels in a group of 2-5 regions) and regionally enhanced (at least four-fold higher mRNA levels in cerebral cortex compared to the average of all regions), The number of genes in the individual category is shown in Table 2. Table 2: Number of genes within the different categories of regionally elevated expression, in mouse cerebral cortex
The expression value representing cerebral cortex in the regional classification is defined as the highest expression (NX) in either of the subregions included. Subregions of the mouse cerebral cortex included in the brain atlas are: frontal cortex (prefrontal and motor cortex sampled together), retrosplenial and cingulate cortex as one sample, somatosensory cortex and visual (occipital) cortex, in total 4 different cortical samples. The entorhinal cortex is also included but grouped together with hippocampus as part of the hippocampal formation. Regionally elevated expression in pig cerebral cortexThe transcriptome analysis shows that 12401 of all pig one-to-one orthologues (n=14656) are expressed in the pig cerebral cortex and 1 genes are classified as regionally enriched genes and in total 86 regionally elevated. Elevated expression in cerebral cortex compared to other brain regions is divided into three different categories; regionally enriched (at least four-fold higher mRNA levels in cerebral cortex compared to all other regions), group enriched (at least four-fold higher mRNA levels in a group of 2-5 regions) and regionally enhanced (at least four-fold higher mRNA levels in cerebral cortex compared to the average of all regions), The number of genes in the individual category is shown in Table 3. Table 3: Number of genes within the different categories of regionally elevated expression, in pig cerebral cortex
Figure 4. Schematic drawing of the pig brain, indicating the location of cerebral cortex from a sagittal view. Unique cellular organization of the cerebral cortex
Figure 5. Example of tripple labeling of the human cortex indicating cells located in the different layers.Yellow color show staining of TPPP3, green color represent NECAB1, red color is the labeling of PCP4 and blue is DAPI counterstaining.
The main neuronal cell type in the cerebral cortex are glutamatergic pyramidal neurons and inhibitory (mainly GABA-ergic) interneurons. These cells are organized in six cellular layers based on cell densities, morphology electrophysiological properties and connections. The cerebral cortex receives its main excitatory input from the thalamus. The neuronal networks, organized in columns spanning all layers of the cerebral cortex, process this information and output signals are send back to thalamus and other subcortical structures. The white matter, approximately 40% of the cerebral cortex, contains the myelinated input axons originating from subcortical structures and myelinated axons originating from cortical pyramidal neurons projecting to subcortical areas of the brain. In addition the human white matter contains some sparsely distributed neurons including a population of large neurons expressing the calcium binding protein CALHM1. Extended human cerebral cortex tissue sectionThe standard setup in the Tissue Atlas, which profiles human tissues, is based on Tissue Micro array technique, saving valuable tissue material as well as reagents and provide a good tissue representation for protein profiling. However, due to the complex nature of the brain, with different cell types and subfeilds, larger tissue sample is occationally used to better understand the protein location. In Table 4, the selected targets used for protein profiling on extended tissue material are listed. Table 4. The following 70 genes have been analyzed using extended cerebral cortex samples. |