Comparison of the number of dendritic spines between an infant and a late adulthood aged sample
(A) Anatomical 3D reconstruction of human L2/3 pyramidal cells from the infant (left), and the late adulthood (right) age groups.
(B) Boxplots of the spine densities on the apical (top), and basal (bottom) dendritic branches from the infant (blue) and late adulthood (red) L2/3 pyramidal cells shown on panel (A).
(C) Graphs showing the distribution of dendritic spine density as a function of the branch order, the infant pyramidal cell shown with blue, the late adulthood pyramidal cell with red, on the apical (top) and on the basal (bottom) dendrites.
(D-H) The plots show the distribution of mushroom (D), thin (E), filopodium (F), branched (G), and stubby (H) dendritic spine types on the apical dendrites of the reconstructed infant (blue) and late adult (cell) pyramidal cells. Top, schematic representation of the examined dendritic spine types. Center, age dependent distribution of spine types. Bottom, spine distributions along branch orders. Asterisks indicate significance (* P < 0.05, ** P < 0.01, *** P < 0.001)
(I-M) Same as D-H but on basal dendrites.