Modelling brain-wide neuronal morphology via rooted Cayley trees

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Abstract

Neuronal morphology is an essential element for brain activity and function. We take advantage of current availability of brain-wide neuron digital reconstructions of the Pyramidal cells from a mouse brain, and analyze several emergent features of brain-wide neuronal morphology. We observe that axonal trees are self-affine while dendritic trees are self-similar. We also show that tree size appear to be random, independent of the number of dendrites within single neurons. Moreover, we consider inhomogeneous branching model which stochastically generates rooted 3-Cayley trees for the brain-wide neuron topology. Based on estimated order-dependent branching probability from actual axonal and dendritic trees, our inhomogeneous model quantitatively captures a number of topological features including size and shape of both axons and dendrites. This sheds lights on a universal mechanism behind the topological formation of brain-wide axonal and dendritic trees.

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Lin, C., Huang, Y., Quan, T., & Zhang, Y. (2018). Modelling brain-wide neuronal morphology via rooted Cayley trees. Scientific Reports, 8(1). https://doi.org/10.1038/s41598-018-34050-1

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