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A Reference Atlas of the Human Dorsal Root Ganglion

Created on 08 Nov 2025

Authors

Bhuiyan, S. A., Nagi, S. S., Sankaranarayanan, I., Semizoglou, E., Usoskin, D., Yang, L., Yu, H., Arendt-Tranholm, A., Bertels, Z., Bhatia, P., Bouchatta, O., Boyer, K., Cervantes, A., Chalif, J., Chintalapudi, H., Cicalo, A., Copits, B., Cronin, C., Curatolo, M., Dong, X., Dougherty, P. M., Dourson, A., Funk, G., Gabriel, K., Griesemer, D. S., Guo, H., Gupta, P., Hofstetter, C., Horton, P., Hsieh, A., Inturi, N. N., Jain, A., Jayakar, S., Johnston, B., Kim, R., Krauter, D., Kupari, J., Lemen, J., Lesnak, J. B., Liu, W., Lopez, I., Lu, Y., MacMillan, H. J., Mazhar, K., Meriau, P., Moffitt, J.

Abstract

Somatosensory perception largely emerges from diverse peripheral sensory neurons whose cell bodies reside in dorsal root ganglia (DRG). Damage or dysfunction of DRG neurons is a major cause of chronic pain and sensory loss. In mice, deep single-cell transcriptomic profiling and genetically defined models have offered important clues into DRG function, but in humans, the cellular and molecular landscape of DRG neurons remains less understood. Here, we constructed a reference cell atlas of the human DRG by profiling transcriptomes of cells and nuclei from 126 donors sampled across cervical, thoracic, and lumbar DRGs. This atlas resolves 22 neuronal subtypes, including known and previously unrecognized subtypes linked to nociception, mechanosensation, thermosensation, and proprioception, as well as 10 types of non-neuronal cells. Cross-species integration, spatial transcriptomics, and microneurography enabled cell-type-specific comparisons of soma size and conduction velocity between species. Human DRG somata are larger across all cell types than their mouse counterparts, and the conduction velocities of human hair follicle innervating A-fibers are faster than in mice, suggesting a functional shift in rapid mechanical detection in humans. This integrated human DRG reference cell atlas provides a resource for exploring new molecular and physiological features of human DRG, which could help identify new strategies for treating chronic pain and other diseases of the peripheral nervous system.

Preprint server: bioRxiv
The authors list and abstract were imported from bioRxiv on 08 Nov 2025.

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