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    Home»Science»See the First Complete Map of a Mammal’s Peripheral Nervous System in Stunning Detail
    Science

    See the First Complete Map of a Mammal’s Peripheral Nervous System in Stunning Detail

    By AdminAugust 28, 2025
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    See the First Complete Map of a Mammal’s Peripheral Nervous System in Stunning Detail


    August 27, 2025

    2 min read

    These Stunning Images Show Every Nerve in a Mouse

    This new “connectome” could bring researchers one step closer to understanding how nerves connect to organs throughout the body

    By Nora Bradford edited by Sarah Lewin Frasier

    Three-dimensional view of vagal innervations to the stomach and duodenum of a mouse on a black background

    The mouse vagus nerve (white) branches into the stomach and small intestine.

    “High-Speed Mapping of Whole-Mouse Peripheral Nerves at Subcellular Resolution,” by Mei-Yu Shi et al., in Cell, Vol. 188, No. 14; July 10, 2025 (CC BY 4.0)

    Your peripheral nervous system (PNS) is crucial to navigating daily life. It lets you walk, controls your eye movements, and rings your brain’s alarms when you step on a Lego brick. Yet researchers have never built a complete map of this essential network in any mammalian body.

    Now a study published in Cell shows a complete, three-dimensional map of every single nerve fiber threading through a mouse. It completes the first-ever mammalian “connectome,” a flowchart of an entire nervous system, beyond just the well-researched brain and spinal cord.

    Side-by-side composite of whole-body scans of two adult mice on a black background

    At left, nerves (blue) are visible in a reconstructed view of their paths through a mouse. At right, the sympathetic nerves appear in purple.

    “High-Speed Mapping of Whole-Mouse Peripheral Nerves at Subcellular Resolution,” by Mei-Yu Shi et al., in Cell, Vol. 188, No. 14; July 10, 2025 (CC BY 4.0)


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    “Mapping of the PNS has been a neglected component of mapping the connectome in animal and human brain studies,” says John Darrell Van Horn, a brain and data science researcher at the University of Virginia, who was not involved in the study.

    The research team began by making the bodies of 16 mice as visually transparent as possible, removing fat, calcium, and other materials that block light. They then used a custom combined slicing tool and microscope to take images of each of the bodies 400 microns at a time, which took about 40 hours per mouse—providing data the researchers say would otherwise have taken months or years to collect.

    Visualization of cranial nerves in a 3D view of nerve and vasculature in a mouse head

    Nerves (blue) wind through a mouse’s head.

    “High-Speed Mapping of Whole-Mouse Peripheral Nerves at Subcellular Resolution,” by Mei-Yu Shi et al., in Cell, Vol. 188, No. 14; July 10, 2025 (CC BY 4.0)

    The scientists genetically modified seven of the mice to have fluorescent neurons; as expected, this caused mostly the head to light up. In four of the mice, the team applied a technique called immunostaining, which uses antibodies to target and color specific proteins—in this case, those in the body’s sympathetic nervous system, which controls “fight or flight” responses. In the remaining five mice, the researchers tested a method using viruses to measure the full length of nerve projections known as axons. They specifically focused on tracing the vagus nerve, which contains projections threading in from thousands of individual neurons. The team found that each vagus nerve fiber connected to only one organ in the gut, rather than branching to many different organs as some had predicted. (Its path through the stomach and part of the small intestine is visualized in the topmost image.)

    “By revealing the precise projection patterns and organ-specific targeting of different peripheral nerves, these maps will provide a structural framework for understanding how the PNS mediates body physiology,” says co-author Guo-Qiang Bi, a biophysicist at the University of Science and Technology of China.

    3D view of the sympathetic innervations to the kidney of a mouse

    Sympathetic nerves (green) within a mouse’s kidney.

    “High-Speed Mapping of Whole-Mouse Peripheral Nerves at Subcellular Resolution,” by Mei-Yu Shi et al., in Cell, Vol. 188, No. 14; July 10, 2025 (CC BY 4.0)

    The researchers hope to apply this method to human tissue next to help plan precision surgeries. Van Horn says the work could also inspire therapies for nerve-related disorders such as chronic pain. “It moves us closer to the precision mapping of the entire mammalian connectome and the diseases that affect it, not just the part between the ears.”

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    I’ve been a Scientific American subscriber since I was 12 years old, and it helped shape the way I look at the world. SciAm always educates and delights me, and inspires a sense of awe for our vast, beautiful universe. I hope it does that for you, too.

    If you subscribe to Scientific American, you help ensure that our coverage is centered on meaningful research and discovery; that we have the resources to report on the decisions that threaten labs across the U.S.; and that we support both budding and working scientists at a time when the value of science itself too often goes unrecognized.

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