Skip to main content
impact
impact
open science
subheadline
careers and opportunities
subheadline
people & teams
people & teams
subheadline
allenites
subheadline
allen institute advisors
subheadline
board of directors
subheadline
shanahan foundation fellowship
subheadline
next generation leaders
subheadline
research
overview
our approach
subheadline
publications
subheadline
open science
subheadline
accelerator
brain science
subheadline
cell science
subheadline
neural dynamics
subheadline
immunology
subheadline
synthetic biology
subheadline
education
education
science education
subheadline
education resources
subheadline
field trips
subheadline
open science
subheadline
open science quest
subheadline
news
news
stories
subheadline
podcast
subheadline
sign up for our newsletter
subheadline
events
events
all events
subheadline
conferences
subheadline
event code of conduct
subheadline
events
open science quest
subheadline
summer workshop on the dynamic brain
subheadline
open science week
subheadline
brain fest
subheadline
science resources
science resources
allencell.org
subheadline
allenimmunology.org
subheadline
allenneuraldynamics.org
subheadline
brain-bican.org
subheadline
brain-map.org
subheadline
microns-explorer.org
subheadline
impact
back to menu
impact
open science
subheading
careers and opportunities
subheading
people & teams
people & teams
subheading
allen institute advisors
subheading
board of directors
subheading
shanahan foundation fellowship
subheading
next generation leaders
subheading
research
back to menu
impact
Label
subheading
Label
subheading
people & teams
education
back to menu
research
Label
subheading
Label
subheading
Heading
news
back to menu
research
Label
subheading
Label
subheading
Heading
events
back to menu
research
Label
subheading
Label
subheading
Heading
science resources
back to menu
science resources
allencell.org
subheading
allenimmunology.org
subheading
allenneuraldynamics.org
subheading
brain-bican.org
subheading
brain-map.org
subheading
microns-explorer.org
subheading
search
impact
people

Hongkui Zeng

Executive Vice President and Director, Brain Science

teams /
Leadership
Allenite

Hongkui Zeng joined the Allen Institute in 2006 and became Executive Vice President, Director for the Brain Science group in 2020. From 2016 to 2020, she led the Structured Science Division to develop and operate high-throughput pipelines to generate large-scale datasets and tools to accelerate neuroscience discovery. Since joining the Allen Institute, she has led several research programs, including the Transgenic Technology program, the Human Cortex Gene Survey project, the Allen Mouse Brain Connectivity Atlas project, the Cell Types and Connectivity program, the Human and Mammalian Brain Cell Atlas project, and the Developmental Mouse Brain Cell Atlas project.

Zeng studies neuronal diversity and connectivity in the mammalian brain-wide circuits in the context of development, function and disease. Through her leadership of multidisciplinary teams, she has built research programs using transcriptomic, connectomic and multimodal approaches to characterize and classify the wide variety of cell types in the brain, laying the foundation for unraveling the cell type basis of brain function. Her work has led to many large-scale, open-access datasets and tools that have become widely adopted community resources and standards, including transgenic mouse lines, Allen Mouse Brain Connectivity Atlas, the Common Coordinate Framework (CCF), and the brain-wide transcriptomic cell type taxonomy and atlas.

Zeng received her Ph.D. in molecular and cell biology from Brandeis University, where she studied the molecular mechanisms of the circadian clock in fruit flies. As a postdoctoral fellow at Massachusetts Institute of Technology, she studied the molecular and synaptic mechanisms underlying hippocampus-dependent plasticity and learning. She has served on multiple advisory boards and councils, including the advisory board of journals Cell and Neuron and as a member of the National Advisory Mental Health Council. She has received many honors, including the 2016 AWIS Award for Scientific Advancement, the 2018 Gill Transformative Investigator Award, the 2023 Pradel Research Award from the National Academy of Sciences, and the 2024 Asian American Engineer of the Year (AAEOY) Award. She is an elected member of the National Academy of Sciences and the National Academy of Medicine.

research focus

The brain circuit is an intricately interconnected network of a vast number of neurons with diverse molecular, anatomical and physiological properties. To understand the principles of information processing in the brain circuit, it is essential to have comprehensive knowledge about the common and unique properties of its components - the neuronal as well as non-neuronal cell types, to monitor their activities while the brain is processing information, and to have the ability to manipulate these cells to investigate their functions in the brain circuit. Combining genetic tools with large-scale imaging and single-cell analysis technologies presents us with the opportunity to gain systematic understanding of the properties, interconnections and functions of these cell types. Zeng’s team at the Allen Institute has built multiple platforms, including single-cell transcriptomics, spatial transcriptomics, single and multi-patching electrophysiology, 3D reconstruction of neuronal morphology, high throughput brain-wide connectivity mapping, large-scale electron microscopy connectomics, and cell type-targeting transgenic and viral tools, to characterize the transcriptomic, physiological, morphological, and connectional properties of different types of mammalian brain cells in a standardized way. Zeng has been the principal investigator on several large National Institutes of Health-funded projects, including a BRAIN Initiative Cell Census Network (BICCN) project in which her team created a comprehensive whole-brain atlas of cell types in the mouse, and two BRAIN Initiative Cell Atlas Network (BICAN) projects with the goals of creating similarly comprehensive and high-resolution cell type atlases for human and non-human primate (NHP) brains and for the developmental mouse brain.The Allen Institute team Zeng leads has utilized these platforms to define and classify the diverse cell types that constitute the mammalian brain and describe their wiring diagrams at different levels, uncovering principles of cell type and circuit organization including the hierarchical organization reflecting the varied similarities and differences among cell types, the coexistence of discrete and continuous transcriptional variations across cell types, the correspondence as well as nuanced heterogeneities at granular levels between transcriptomic profiles and other modalities of cellular properties, and the conservation and divergence of cell types across species. The Allen team has been building the online Brain Knowledge Platform to provide all the data, knowledge and tools as comprehensive foundational resources to the broader neuroscience community. Zeng’s research has also moved beyond cell atlasing, further into studies of cell type and cell state changes during developmental, aging, behavioral, pharmacological, and diseased processes, revealing new relationships between spatiotemporal transcriptomic dynamics and cell type-specific functions. Altogether, building such an integrated and dynamic cell type knowledge base lays the foundation for decoding the computational mechanisms of brain circuit function.

back to team
featured contributions
featured publications
featured media
featured stories
featured events

featured publications

publication / 2025
Data-driven fine-grained region discovery in the mouse brain with transformers
Nature Communications
publication / 2025
The xIV-LDDMM toolkit of image-varifold based technologies for mapping 3D images and spatial-omics across scales
Communications Biology
publication / 2025
Imaging high-frequency voltage dynamics in multiple neuron classes of behaving mammals
Cell

featured events

No articles for the category

featured stories

news 
Mind trip: How psilocybin changes the brain
New research may help improve psychedelic therapy for neuropsychiatric disorders
news 
Scientists complete first drafts of developing mammalian brain cell atlases
New research reveals how early brains form and the critical periods that could help diagnose and treat brain disease.
news 
Mapping the brain to improve lives
A collaborative effort between UW and the Allen Institute is creating a first-of-its-kind brain atlas, paving the way for breakthroughs in brain...

featured media

media / Nature
🔒 Nature: The ‘silent’ brain cells that shape our behaviour, memory and health
A rush of studies from labs in many subfields are revealing just how important astrocytes are in shaping our behavior, mood and memory.
media / The Scientist
The Scientist: A New Cell Atlas Helps Researchers Navigate the Developing Brain
Researchers collaborating on a BRAIN Initiative project unveiled the most comprehensive map of developing mammalian brains to date.
media / Yahoo News
Yahoo News: Two-tiered atlas of the developing human brain offers new hope in Parkinson’s treatment
This work sits alongside the U.S. NIH BRAIN Initiative Cell Atlas Network to build a complete atlas of human brain cells.
we acceleratedevelopcatalyzeimpact

science done differently. shared with the world.

explore our accelerators

brain science

Mapping every cell, connection, and circuit in the brain—openly shared with the world.

cell science

Decoding how cells become tissues, then programming that knowledge into powerful new research tools.

neural dynamics

Revealing the brain's hidden algorithms that transform neural activity into real-world behavior.

immunology

Creating the deepest open reference for the healthy human immune system ever built.

synthetic biology

Engineering cells to record their own histories, transforming how we understand disease over time.

research

Big questions, open answers, and science built to be shared.

education

Inspiring the next generation of scientists through open science resources.

impact

Our science is empowering researchers and advancing health worldwide.
advancing science through open, collaborative research
Get the allen institute newsletter
Stay informed on the latest breakthroughs in neuroscience, bioscience, and AI-driven research.
allen institute
impactpeople & teamscareers & opportunitiesalumnihistory & founder
science resources
allencell.orgallenimmunology.orgallenneuraldynamics.orgbrain-bican.orgbrain-map.orgmicrons-explorer.org
research
brain sciencecell scienceneural dynamicsimmunologysynthetic biologypublications
education
science educationfield tripsprofessional developmenteducation resources
quick links
newseventsopen sciencepodcastscience resourceshuman brain donationvisit uscontact
follow us/

allen institute, 615 Westlake Ave North, Seattle, WA 98109 +12065487055

© 0000 allen institute. all rights reserved.
privacy policyterms of usecitation policyemployee portalpolicy & compliance