Source - http://news.cnet.com/
By - Dara Kerr
Category - Attractions In Santa Clarita
Posted By - Hampton Inn Santa Clarita
By - Dara Kerr
Category - Attractions In Santa Clarita
Posted By - Hampton Inn Santa Clarita
Attractions In Santa Clarita |
Petri dishes have hosted all sorts of experiments, like cultivating
mold or creating amoeba breeding grounds. But now, truly futuristic
events are happening in these circular glass plates -- most notably,
growing a brain.
That's right, scientists are now raising brains in petri dishes.
According to a study in the science journal Nature,
biologists at the Institute of Molecular Biotechnology in Vienna have
grown a human brain using stem cells. This brain isn't full-grown;
instead, it is small 3D sections of tissue that apparently resemble the
brain of a 9-week-old fetus. It is about 3 to 4 millimeters in size.
Despite not being fully developed, this brain model still has distinct
regions of the brain, like the dorsal cortex, ventral forebrain, and an
immature retina.
"The parts are correctly organized, but not put together," said study coordinator Juergen Knoblich, according to Popular Science. Knoblich describes it as "a
car
where you have an engine, you have the wheels -- but the engine is on
the roof... that car would never drive, but you could still take that
car and analyze how an engine works."
The goal of these
scientists is to be able to use lab-grown brains to study illnesses,
like schizophrenia and autism. Apparently, animal brains are too
dissimilar from human brains for conclusive studies on many types of
neurological diseases.
Scientists have created other body parts, like livers and heart tissue,
but these organs are nowhere near as intricate as a brain. According to
Popular Science, the 3D brain model created by the Viennese researchers
is the most complex in vitro creation of tissue to date.
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