Windsor Star

Braincells­don’tstopgrowi­ng,researcher­ssay

- Sarah Knapton

LONDON • The brain never stops growing, scientists have found in a landmark discovery that could help treat degenerati­ve diseases. Researcher­s previously believed the brain did not grow new cells after childhood, which is why it is so much harder for adults to pick up new skills or learn a foreign language.

More recent studies suggested that if specific zones of the brain were hyperstimu­lated, cells could form. One involved London cab drivers studying the so-called Knowledge — a mental map of London’s streets — who were found to have an increased number of neurons in areas linked to navigation.

But a study, published in the journal Cell Stem Cell, has found new brain cells are forming all the time, even in the elderly. It suggests problems with mental ability and memory associated with old age are not down to a loss of neurons, but rather a failure of cells to communicat­e with each other.

Maura Boldrini, associate professor of neurobiolo­gy at Columbia University in New York, said: “We found that older people have similar ability to make thousands of hippocampa­l new neurons from progenitor cells as younger people do. “We also found equivalent volumes of the hippocampu­s, a brain structure used for emotion and cognition, across ages. Neverthele­ss, older individual­s had less vasculariz­ation (blood vessel formation) and maybe less ability of new neurons to make connection­s.”

The breakthrou­gh could help scientists understand the causes of dementia and how to prevent it from occurring. For the research, scientists looked at the hippocampu­s in 28 previously healthy individual­s aged 14 to 79 who had died suddenly. They found that even in the oldest brains, new cells were forming up to death.

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