A deep-learning strategy to identify cell types across species from high-density extracellular recordings

bioRxiv [Preprint]. 2024 May 5:2024.01.30.577845. doi: 10.1101/2024.01.30.577845.

Abstract

High-density probes allow electrophysiological recordings from many neurons simultaneously across entire brain circuits but don't reveal cell type. Here, we develop a strategy to identify cell types from extracellular recordings in awake animals, revealing the computational roles of neurons with distinct functional, molecular, and anatomical properties. We combine optogenetic activation and pharmacology using the cerebellum as a testbed to generate a curated ground-truth library of electrophysiological properties for Purkinje cells, molecular layer interneurons, Golgi cells, and mossy fibers. We train a semi-supervised deep-learning classifier that predicts cell types with greater than 95% accuracy based on waveform, discharge statistics, and layer of the recorded neuron. The classifier's predictions agree with expert classification on recordings using different probes, in different laboratories, from functionally distinct cerebellar regions, and across animal species. Our classifier extends the power of modern dynamical systems analyses by revealing the unique contributions of simultaneously-recorded cell types during behavior.

Keywords: Neuropixels; cell-type identification; cerebellar cortex; cerebellum; circuit mapping; machine learning; variational autoencoder.

Publication types

  • Preprint