Afghanistan

Scientists have transplanted human brain cells into the brains of baby rats, where the cells grew and formed connections.It's part of an effort to better study human brain development and diseases affecting this most complex of organs, which makes us who we are but has long been shrouded in mystery.Many disorders such as autism and schizophrenia are likely uniquely human& but ''the human brain certainly has not been very accessible,& said said Dr.
Sergiu Pasca, senior author of a study describing the work, published Wednesday in the journal Nature.Approaches that don''t involve taking tissue out of the human brain are &promising avenues in trying to tackle these conditions.The research builds upon the team's previous work creating brain &organoids,& tiny structures resembling human organs that have also been made to represent others such as livers, kidneys, prostates, or key parts of them.To make the brain organoids, Stanford University scientists transformed human skin cells into stem cells and then coaxed them to become several types of brain cells.
Those cells then multiplied to form organoids resembling the cerebral cortex, the human brain's outermost layer, which plays a key role in things like memory, thinking, learning, reasoning and emotions.Scientists transplanted those organoids into rat pups 2 to 3 days old, a stage when brain connections are still forming.
The organoids grew so that they eventually occupied a third of the hemisphere of the rat's brain where they were implanted.
Neurons from the organoids formed working connections with circuits in the brain.Human neurons have been transplanted in rodents before, but generally in adult animals, usually mice.
Pasca, a psychiatry professor at the Stanford School of Medicine, said this is the first time these organoids have been placed into early rat brains, creating ''the most advanced human brain circuitry ever built from human skin cells and a demonstration that implanted human neurons can influence an animal's behavior.To examine a practical use of this approach, scientists transplanted organoids into both sides of a rat's brain: one generated from a healthy person's cells and another from the cells of a person with Timothy syndrome, a rare genetic condition associated with heart problems and autism spectrum disorder.Five to six months later, they saw effects of the disease related to the activity of the neurons.
There were differences in the two sides& electrical activity, and the neurons from the person with Timothy syndrome were much smaller and didn''t sprout as many extensions that pick up input from nearby neurons.Researchers, whose study was funded partly by the National Institutes of Health, said they could do the same sorts of experiments using organoids made from the cells of people with disorders such as autism or schizophrenia — and potentially learn new things about how these conditions affect the brain, too.Dr.
Flora Vaccarino of Yale University & who previously grew lumps containing cerebral cortex that were made with DNA from people with autism & said the study moves the field forward.Such experiments in animals raise ethical concerns.
For example, Pasca said he and his team are cognizant of the rats& well-being and whether they still behave normally with the organoids inside them, which he says they do.
Still, Pasca does not believe this should be tried in primates.
Ethicists also wonder about the possibility of brain organoids in the future attaining something like human consciousness, which experts say is extremely unlikely now.Some scientists are studying human brain organoids outside of animals.
For example, researchers at ETH Zurich in Switzerland published a study in Nature earlier this month describing how they are growing brain-like tissue from stem cells in the lab and then mapping the cell types in various brain regions and genes regulating their development.
Some are using these structures to study autism.The post Scientists grow human brain cells in rats to study diseases first appeared on Ariana News.





Unlimited Portal Access + Monthly Magazine - 12 issues


Contribute US to Start Broadcasting - It's Voluntary!


ADVERTISE


Merchandise (Peace Series)

 


[Afghanistan] - Saar: MoIC's accomplishments and obstacles evaluated


[Afghanistan] - Over 50,000 company licenses issued to ladies business owners in one year, states Azizi


[Afghanistan] - Shpageeza Cricket League's 10th season starts in Kabul


[Afghanistan] - Herat governor heads to Iran for main visit


[Afghanistan] - UN refugee boss shows up in Afghanistan amid unprecedented returns


[Afghanistan] - German chancellor eliminate recognition of Islamic Emirate of Afghanistan


[Afghanistan] - Pakistan chooses not to extend PoR cards of Afghan refugees


[Afghanistan] - Germany and EU allies push for asylum crackdown and more deportations


[Afghanistan] - Israel and Syria agree ceasefire as Israel permits Syrian troops minimal access to Sweida


AFPL Friday Roundup: Omid 4–3 Arya Forj, Noorzad 5–5 Pirozi Panjshir


[Afghanistan] - Extraordinary water crisis in Kabul threatens 6 million citizens, UN warns


Ministry of Refugees announces over 1 billion AFN in UK aid for Afghan returnees


Over 11 million refugees may lose aid access due to cuts, says UN agency


[Afghanistan] - Pakistan sacks 2 top Interior Ministry authorities over Afghan visa scandal


Germany deports 81 Afghan nationals to their homeland


Afghanistan, Pakistan, and Uzbekistan pledge to boost economic cooperation


Malaysia detains seven Afghans for using fake visas


[Afghanistan] - Pakistani TV channels withdraw reports on Trump see


Pakistan’s Deputy PM meets Sirajuddin Haqqani in Kabul


[Afghanistan] - Lula says he won't take orders from immigrant Trump, calls tariffs blackmail


[Afghanistan] - AFPL: Etihad 4-- 0 Zaitoon; Sadaqat 10-- 1 Jawanan Maihan


Tahawol: Discussion on Iran’s ill-treatment of Afghan refugees


Uzbek Foreign Minister meets Haqqani, reaffirms commitment to strengthening bilateral ties


Saar: Israel’s attacks on Syria discussed


Afghanistan, Pakistan, Uzbekistan sign Trans-Afghan Railway Project feasibility study agreement


[Afghanistan] - Iran defends deportation of Afghan refugees


[Afghanistan] - Afghanistan-- Tajikistan trade grows by 31 percent


[Afghanistan] - USAID food for nearly 30,000 hungry kids in Afghanistan, Pakistan to be destroyed


[Afghanistan] - Trump set to visit Pakistan in September, reports state


[Afghanistan] - IEA denies hunting down people based upon dripped British information


[Afghanistan] - Top-level delegations from Uzbekistan and Pakistan expected in Kabul for talks and train agreement


[Afghanistan] - Pakistan's Deputy Prime Minister to check out Kabul for finalizing of railway contract


[Afghanistan] - Fifty people killed in a shopping center fire in Iraq, state news agency reports


West has stolen Afghanistan’s money: Russian official


[Afghanistan] - Syria's interim president says safeguarding Druze a 'priority'Syria & s interim President Ahmed al-Sharaa said on Thursday that securing Druze residents and their rights is & our top priority & , as Israel swore to dama


[Afghanistan] - Islamic Emirate: Israeli attacks on Syria spread mayhem in the area


[Afghanistan] - Tahawol: Discussion on SCO's require inclusive government in Afghanistan


[Afghanistan] - Saar: Effective counter-narcotics efforts in Afghanistan talked about


[Afghanistan] - Haqqani: Close ties with people vital to enhancing public trust


[Afghanistan] - Bayat Foundation broadens aid operations for Afghan returnees at crucial border crossings


Israel launches airstrikes on Syria as sectarian violence escalates in Suwayda


[Afghanistan] - Iranian male detained for ruthless murder of Afghan teen near Tehran


[Afghanistan] - Kazakhstan's President consults with his Afghanistan envoy as ties with Kabul deepen


[Afghanistan] - Pakistan urges inclusive governance, national agreement in Afghanistan at SCO summit


[Afghanistan] - EU-funded dam finished in Kandahar's Khakrez district, improving water access for thousands


[Afghanistan] - Ghulam Khan border crossing in Khost briefly resumed after two-week closure


Trump says Zelenskiy should not target Moscow


[Afghanistan] - AFPL: Sadaqat 2-- 1 Zaitoon, Noorzad 2-- 1 Arya Forj


[Afghanistan] - Tahawol: Mass deportation of Afghan refugees from Iran discussed


[Afghanistan] - Saar: Kabul's efforts to broaden worldwide diplomatic relations discussed


Karzai urges neighbors to halt forced deportations amid Afghanistan’s refugee crisis


[Afghanistan] - Camel tears reveal guarantee in reducing the effects of snake venom, research study finds


[Afghanistan] - IEA declares commitment to anti-drug efforts, prompts international assistance


[Afghanistan] - Uzbekistan, Afghanistan, Pakistan advance plans for tactical trade corridor


[Afghanistan] - UN envoy advises immediate international reaction as Afghan returns rise


[Afghanistan] - SCO Foreign Ministers fulfill in China as member states prepare for fall top


[Afghanistan] - IEA expresses acknowledgements over death of Pashto poet Matiullah Turab


Zelenskiy names new prime minister, taps official who spearheaded US minerals deal


US appeals court temporarily upholds protected status for Afghans


[Afghanistan] - Saar: Middle East crisis and its effects discussed


[Afghanistan] - AFPL: Omid draw with Jawanan Maihan; Etihad 3-1 Perozi Panjshir


[Afghanistan] - UN envoy raises alarm over Afghanistan's widespread illiteracy


[Afghanistan] - Afghan family in India invited for breakfast by Kerala education minister


[Afghanistan] - Afghanistan aid response at breaking point, $1.4 b funding gap


Afghanistan-Pakistan trade surges 25% to nearly $2 billion in 2024


[Afghanistan] - Chelsea clinch historic FIFA Club World Cup title with commanding win over PSG


[Afghanistan] - Israeli rocket strikes Gaza kids gathering water, IDF blames breakdown


[Afghanistan] - Russia, China talk about Ukraine war and ties with the United States


[Afghanistan] - Tahawol: Efforts to assist returnees gone over


[Afghanistan] - AFPL: Zahir Asad 3-- 3 Arya Forj; Noorzad 8-- 2 Deyar Sanayee


[Afghanistan] - Saar: Kabul's broadening ties with Central Asian nations gone over


[Afghanistan] - Nadeem knocks int'l community for 'double requirements' over ICC arrest warrants


[Afghanistan] - Iran's VP: Deported Afghans can go to diplomatic objectives to pursue their claims


[Afghanistan] - IEA delegation attends global railway congress in China


[Afghanistan] - Khalilzad declines claims that China manages previous US base in Afghanistan


[Afghanistan] - Afghanistan's Education Ministry promises schooling for returnee trainees from Iran


[Afghanistan] - End of United States secured status for Afghans sparks fears of deportation


[Afghanistan] - Pakistan's Gandapur pledges more assistance to Afghanistan, including new cancer healthcare facility


[Afghanistan] - Iran states it will work with IAEA however examinations might be dangerous