Brain, heal thyself.Can scientists prompt the brain to grow new nerve cells to replace ones felled by strokes or neurodegenerative diseases neurodegenerative diseases diseases characterized by neurodegeneration. Lesions are microscopic only but in chronic disease with massive involvement there may be grossly visible atrophy of affected nervous tissue. such as Alzheimer's? That's a recurring dream, reinvigorated by data published in the June 22 NATURE. In 1998, countering decades of dogma, scientists obtained convincing evidence that an adult's brain can grow new nerve cells. These newborn cells derive from neural stem cells stem cells, unspecialized human or animal cells that can produce mature specialized body cells and at the same time replicate themselves. Embryonic stem cells are derived from a blastocyst (the blastula typical of placental mammals; see embryo), which is very young , rare precursor cells within the human brain. Two years ago, scientists isolated these versatile cells and grew them in the laboratory. That bolstered the possibility that neural--stem cell transplants could heal damaged brains (SN: 11/7/98, p. 293). Jeffrey Macklis of Children's Hospital A children's hospital is a hospital which offers its services exclusively to children. The number of children's hospitals proliferated in the 20th century, as pediatric medical and surgical specialties separated from internal medicine and adult surgical specialties. in Boston and his colleagues wonder whether there's another option. Perhaps the stem cells already within a stricken brain can be stimulated to do a better repair job than they normally do. In mouse experiments exploring that idea, Macklis' team first induced mouse nerve cells to commit suicide Verb 1. commit suicide - kill oneself; "the terminally ill patient committed suicide" kill - cause to die; put to death, usually intentionally or knowingly; "This man killed several people when he tried to rob a bank"; "The farmer killed a pig for the holidays" in a brain region known as the neocortex neocortex /neo·cor·tex/ (-kor´teks) the newer, six-layered portion of the cerebral cortex, showing the most highly evolved stratification and organization. Cf. archicortex and paleocortex. . This indeed triggered the growth of new nerve cells over the following weeks. Physicians would never deliberately kill brain cells in a person, notes Macklis, but such animal experiments may help reveal the natural signals the brain uses to turn on its in-house repair machinery. |
|
||||||||||||||||||||

Printer friendly
Cite/link
Email
Feedback
Reader Opinion