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rosehip neuron (plural rosehip neurons)

  1. (neurology, biology) A type of information-controlling brain cell, which is found in humans.
    • 2018, Boldog, Eszter, Trygve E. Bakken, Rebecca D. Hodge, Mark Novotny, Brian D. Aevermann, Judith Baka, Sándor Bordé et al., “Transcriptomic and morphophysiological evidence for a specialized human cortical GABAergic cell type.”, in Nature Neuroscience[1], volume 21, number 9:
      Finally, to more concretely link morphologically and transcriptionally defined RCs, we performed digital PCR for additional marker genes on cellular content extracted from individual rosehip neurons.
    • 2019, Kameneva, Polina, and Igor Adameyko, “Recent advances in our understanding of central and peripheral nervous system progenitors”, in Current Opinion in Cell Biology[2], volume 61:
      For instance, Boldog et al. identified a new specialized human cortical GABAergic cell type called a rosehip neuron. These rosehip neurons seem to be functionally related to regulation of distal dendritic computation in pyramidal neurons
    • 2020 February 22, Bhattacharya, Aniket et al., “Origin of a novel CYP20A1 transcript isoform through multiple Alu exaptations creates a potential miRNA sponge”, in BioRxiv[3]:
      We demonstrate its presence in single nucleus RNA-seq of ∼16000 human cortical neurons (including rosehip neurons).

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