- Hodge, Rebecca D;
- Miller, Jeremy A;
- Novotny, Mark;
- Kalmbach, Brian E;
- Ting, Jonathan T;
- Bakken, Trygve E;
- Aevermann, Brian D;
- Barkan, Eliza R;
- Berkowitz-Cerasano, Madeline L;
- Cobbs, Charles;
- Diez-Fuertes, Francisco;
- Ding, Song-Lin;
- McCorrison, Jamison;
- Schork, Nicholas J;
- Shehata, Soraya I;
- Smith, Kimberly A;
- Sunkin, Susan M;
- Tran, Danny N;
- Venepally, Pratap;
- Yanny, Anna Marie;
- Steemers, Frank J;
- Phillips, John W;
- Bernard, Amy;
- Koch, Christof;
- Lasken, Roger S;
- Scheuermann, Richard H;
- Lein, Ed S
von Economo neurons (VENs) are bipolar, spindle-shaped neurons restricted to layer 5 of human frontoinsula and anterior cingulate cortex that appear to be selectively vulnerable to neuropsychiatric and neurodegenerative diseases, although little is known about other VEN cellular phenotypes. Single nucleus RNA-sequencing of frontoinsula layer 5 identifies a transcriptomically-defined cell cluster that contained VENs, but also fork cells and a subset of pyramidal neurons. Cross-species alignment of this cell cluster with a well-annotated mouse classification shows strong homology to extratelencephalic (ET) excitatory neurons that project to subcerebral targets. This cluster also shows strong homology to a putative ET cluster in human temporal cortex, but with a strikingly specific regional signature. Together these results suggest that VENs are a regionally distinctive type of ET neuron. Additionally, we describe the first patch clamp recordings of VENs from neurosurgically-resected tissue that show distinctive intrinsic membrane properties relative to neighboring pyramidal neurons.