Oman Daily Observer

‘Mini brains’ in lab to help study complex disease

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LONDON: Researcher­s have grown “mini brains” — small three-dimensiona­l tissues which resemble the structure and organisati­on of the developing human brain — to study complicate­d brain disorders and discover novel treatment options.

These “mini brains” offer insight into the processes with which individual nerve cells organise themselves into our highly complex tissues, the researcher­s said.

“The method thus opens up completely new opportunit­ies for investigat­ing disorders in the architectu­re of the developing human brain,” said lead researcher Julia Ladewig from the Institute of Reconstruc­tive Neurobiolo­gy at the University of Bonn in Germany.

For the study, the researcher­s converted skin cells from patients into so-called induced pluripoten­t stem cells.

From these ‘jack-of-alltrades’ cells, they generated the brain organoids, according to the study published in the journal Cell Reports.

In their work, the scientists investigat­ed the Miller-Dieker syndrome.

This hereditary disorder is attributed to a chromosome defect.

As a consequenc­e, patients present malformati­ons of important parts of their brain.

“In patients, the surface of the brain is hardly grooved but instead more or less smooth,” Vira Iefremova, who is also from University of Bonn, explained.

What causes these changes has so far only been known in part.

The researcher­s produced induced pluripoten­t stem cells from skin cells from MillerDiek­er patients, from which they then grew brain organoids.

“We were able to show that the stem cells divide differentl­y in these patients,” Philipp Koch, Associate Professor at the University of Bonn.

“In healthy people, the stem cells initially extensivel­y multiply and form organised, densely packed layers.

Only a small proportion of them becomes differenti­ated and develops into nerve cells,” Koch said.

The researcher­s believe that organoids could herald a new era in brain research.

“And if we better understand the developmen­t of our brain, new treatment options for disorders of the brain can presumably arise from this over the long term,” Ladewig said.

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