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  • Title: Striatonigrostriatal connectivity-based cross-species parcellation of human and macaque substantia nigra.
    Author: Xia X, Zeng X, Gao F, Hua L, Huang S, Yuan Z.
    Journal: Hum Brain Mapp; 2023 Aug 15; 44(12):4590-4604. PubMed ID: 37347619.
    Abstract:
    Anatomical and functional heterogeneous substantia nigra (SN) has been extensively studied in humans and animals like rhesus monkeys given its crucial role in modulating a broad range of behaviors. Increasingly important cross-species research of SN may require connectionally homogeneous and homologous subregions of SN as objective and stable starting points from which the evolutionary characteristics of brain could be inspected. However, existing atlases of SN were all inaccurate mappings as a cross-species connectome atlas due to inadequate homology constraint during their constructions, and arbitrary paired use of these atlases might cause unreliable findings. In this study, a reliable blind-source cross-species parcellation of SN was developed based on the following rationale: striatonigrostriatal circuits form major structure of nigral connectivity; different nigral components have unique striatonigrostriatal connectivity; and inter-species corresponding human and macaque nigral components have similar striatonigrostriatal connectivity. Specifically, all voxels in human and macaque SN were grouped together and then classified based on inter-species identically characterized striatonigrostriatal connectivity attributes. Our results delineated a pars compacta-pars reticulate-like parcellation and further demonstrated its reliability by illustrating best-matched whole-brain structural and functional connectivity profiles of inter-species corresponding nigral subregions. Detailed inter-species and inter-regional differences in multi-aspect connectivities of these nigral subregions were inspected. It is expected that this cross-species connectome atlas of SN can offer biologically reliable cornerstones and important information to facilitate future cross-species research.
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