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The cognitive abilities of humans are distinctive among primates, but their molecular and cellular substrates are poorly understood. We used comparative single-nucleus transcriptomics to analyze samples of the middle temporal gyrus (MTG) from adult humans, chimpanzees, gorillas, rhesus macaques, and common marmosets to understand human-specific features of the neocortex. Human, chimpanzee, and gorilla MTG showed highly similar cell-type composition and laminar organization as well as a large shift in proportions of deep-layer intratelencephalic-projecting neurons compared with macaque and marmoset MTG. Microglia, astrocytes, and oligodendrocytes had more-divergent expression across species compared with neurons or oligodendrocyte precursor cells, and neuronal expression diverged more rapidly on the human lineage. Only a few hundred genes showed human-specific patterning, suggesting that relatively few cellular and molecular changes distinctively define adult human cortical structure.more » « less
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Farrah, Duncan; Smith, Kimberly Ennico; Ardila, David; Bradford, Charles M.; Dipirro, Michael; Ferkinhoff, Carl; Glenn, Jason; Goldsmith, Paul; Leisawitz, David; Nikola, Thomas; et al (, Journal of Astronomical Telescopes, Instruments, and Systems)
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Meixner, Margaret; Cooray, Asantha; Leisawitz, David T.; Staguhn, Johannes G.; Armus, Lee; Battersby, Cara; Bauer, James; Benford, Dominic; Bergin, Edwin; Bradford, Charles Matt; et al (, Journal of Astronomical Telescopes, Instruments, and Systems)null (Ed.)
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Hodge, Rebecca D.; Bakken, Trygve E.; Miller, Jeremy A.; Smith, Kimberly A.; Barkan, Eliza R.; Graybuck, Lucas T.; Close, Jennie L.; Long, Brian; Johansen, Nelson; Penn, Osnat; et al (, Nature)
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