8
IBIC Summer Retreat Allen Institute Human Brain Atlas Allan R. Jones, PhD Chief Scientific Officer June 7, 2009

IBIC Summer Retreat Allen Institute Human Brain Atlas Allan R. Jones, PhD Chief Scientific Officer June 7, 2009

Embed Size (px)

Citation preview

IBIC Summer RetreatAllen Institute Human Brain Atlas

Allan R. Jones, PhD

Chief Scientific Officer

June 7, 2009

Allen Institute for Brain Science: Fueling Discovery

• Who/what we are:– An independent, non-profit research organization working to support basic research in

the brain sciences (founded in 2001).

– Dedicated to making tools and information readily available to the scientific community

– Project-focused, milestone driven

– Multi-disciplinary teams working towards a common goal (math, physics, engineering, systems-level and molecular neuroscience, molecular biology, genetics, genomics, information technology)

– ~120 staff (30 PhDs)

– Located in 35000 sf of mixed lab/office space in the Fremont neighborhood of Seattle Washington

• What we are not:– A traditional, PI-driven research organization

– An extramural funding agency

The Allen Institute for Brain Science: Tools, resources, and data

Atlases: •Adult mouse brain (complete Sept. 2006)

•Mouse spinal cord (complete April 2009)

•Mouse development (complete March 2010)

• Human brain

•Phase 1 complete mid-2010

•Phase 2 complete in 2012

Projects:

•Sleep study (complete Dec. 2007)

•Genetic diversity study (complete May 2008)

• Human cortex survey (complete Sept. 2008)

•Human cortex population study/schizophrenia (complete Jan. 2009)

•Human Glioblastoma (complete April 2011 with possible extension)

Tools:

•Transgenic mouse drivers/reporters

•~20,000 unique visits per month across all projects (65% mouse brain, 10% human cortex, 10% development, 10% spinal cord, 5% sleep)•Atlas paper has been cited 260 times since publication in January 2007 (validation, discovery)

Connecting the “what” to the “where”

• We are quickly approaching a renaissance in our understanding of the basic genetic underpinnings of human biology and behavior

– Technology has enabled easy, cheap access to high resolution genetic data from humans. Large scale studies are underway

– Technology has provided ways to link functions in the brain to location

• Researchers that study genetics of human behavior and brain disease will be able to identify key genes

• Researchers that study brain function can already pinpoint brain locations that are altered or perform aberrantly in disease

• A key resource is needed to tie the “functional” maps with the “genetic” maps: a gene expression map of the human brain

Human Brain Atlas Overview: 2008-2012Multimodal atlas integrating gene expression and neuroanatomy

Phase 1: Anatomic resolution atlasAll structures:Comprehensively sample human brain

All genes:Microarray and sequence-based gene expression profiling

Phase 2: Cellular resolution atlasMost structures:High-resolution atlas of each structure

High-value genes: ISH for 50-500 genes/structure

Planning Phase 1: Microarray Data

2008 2009 2010 2011 2012

Planning Phase 2: ISH data

Protocol v 0.5 Status Check Initial data release Project completion

(Fresh brain images courtesy Mark Vawter and Preston Cartagena)

Section 1 mm of slab

Whole brain to microarray: serial divisionsWhole brain 5 mm coronal slabs Full coronal histology

Subdivide slab into 2x3 blocks

(subset of ~60 structures)

Nis sl

Nis sl

Nis

sl

My

el

in

My

el

in

Mye

lin IHC

IHC

IHCIH

CIH

CIS

H

Nis sl

Nis sl

Nis

sl

My

el

in

My

el

in

Mye

lin IHC

IHC

IHCIH

CIH

CL

CM

subcortex

cortex

Cryosection through 3 mm of 2x3 block Final 1 mm of block

gross dissection

1 cmsampling

0.5 cmsampling

MRI

~700 cortical samples

~300 subcortical samples

Macro-dissection (cortex)

2-10 human brain specimens

5 mm coronal slabs

Blockface images

6x8 histology, 2x3 histology, immunohistochemistry and in situ

hybridization (ISH)

Subdivided slab 2x3 blocks

Anatomic segmentations

User applications

MRI and DTI

Microarray analysis

LCM (sub-cortex)

(a)

(d)

(b) (c)

(e) (f)

(g) (h)(i)

(j)

Human Atlas Analysis and Visualization Applications