Multiscale transcriptomic organization of the human brain with DigitalBrain

Avatar
Poster
Voice is AI-generated
Connected to paperThis paper is a preprint and has not been certified by peer review

Multiscale transcriptomic organization of the human brain with DigitalBrain

Authors

An, J.; Hu, X.; Jiang, Y.; Jiang, M.; Qiu, S.; Liu, G.; Wei, X.; Wang, Y.; Lin, J. Q.; Wang, C.; Lu, M.

Abstract

The human brain varies across anatomical regions, cell types, development, ageing and disease states, yet existing single-cell transcriptomic resources remain fragmented and difficult to integrate into a unified biological model. Here we present DigitalBrain, a human brain-specific atlas and foundation-model framework for organizing diverse and fragmented human brain transcriptomic data across scales. We first built DigitalBrain-Atlas, a harmonized whole-brain single-cell resource comprising 16.35 million transcriptomes from 2,143 donors across 165 brain regions, spanning the human lifespan and multiple neurological and clinical conditions. We then developed DigitalBrain-M1, a Transformer-based model that jointly encodes gene identity and expression magnitude to learn a shared embedding space for cells and genes. Across held-out datasets, DigitalBrain supported robust single-cell integration, clustering and cell-type annotation while preserving major biological structure and reducing technical fragmentation. Beyond these benchmarks, the learned embeddings revealed emergent large-scale hierarchical organization of the human brain, linking anatomically distinct regions into higher-order patterns consistent with known functional systems. Applied to human hippocampal aging, DigitalBrain identified cell-type-specific aging sensitive gene sets, identified dentate gyrus granule cells as a particularly age-sensitive population, and discovered selective reorganization of gene programs related to synaptic transmission, postsynaptic structure, membrane excitability and axon guidance during aging. Cross-dataset convergence was strongest at the level of functional modules and recurrent aging sensitive genes. Together, these results demonstrate DigitalBrain as a brain-specific framework for mapping human brain organization across scales, and as an early step towards a complete virtual organ for the human brain.

Follow Us on

0 comments

Add comment