HCN channels reveal conserved and divergent physiology in supragranular pyramidal neurons in primate species
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The physiological properties of human and rodent neurons differ, yet the extent to which these differences reflect human specializations is often unclear. Compared with their rodent counterparts, human supragranular pyramidal neurons possess enriched HCN-channel-dependent intrinsic membrane properties and a related sensitivity to synaptic inputs containing delta/theta band frequencies. We tested whether other primate species possess enriched HCN-channel dependent membrane properties. We found ubiquitous HCN1 subunit gene expression in supragranular glutamatergic neurons across New World Monkeys, Old-World Monkeys, and great apes in single nucleus RNA-sequencing datasets. Using Patch-seq recordings from acute and cultured brain slices, we found robust HCN-dependent physiological properties in supragranular pyramidal neurons in a species of New-World monkey ( Saimiri sciureus ) and two species of Old-World Monkey ( Macaca mulatta, Macaca nemestrina ). In both human and macaque neocortex, HCN-related intrinsic properties increased in magnitude with increasing laminar depth, especially in one transcriptomic cell type. Within this type, HCN dependent properties were more pronounced in macaque than human neurons. These findings indicate that HCN-governed membrane properties and sensitivity to delta/theta band frequencies are roughly conserved in supragranular pyramidal neurons across at least 36 million years of primate evolution.