Irish Daily Mail

Mini brains grown in lab ‘talk to each other’

- By Victoria Allen news@dailymail.ie

Similar brainwaves to premature baby

SCIENTISTS have created laboratory-grown mini brains which produce similar brainwaves to those of premature babies.

The breakthrou­gh is the closest researcher­s have come to growing a functionin­g brain in a petri dish.

The mini-brains begin as human skin cells, which scientists use to create stem cells like those of a baby in the womb – capable of forming any part of the body. These cells are then grown in a chemical soup which contains the ingredient­s they need to become brain cells.

This has been done before, and the pea-sized ‘brains’ are not the first to be created in the lab, nor are they actual fully operating brains. However, for the first time these mini-organs have been made to ‘talk’ to each other as brain cells do in the human body.

When researcher­s compared their lab-grown brains with those of premature babies, some electrical signals from both were similar.

Just as in growing babies, the mini-brain cells produced a signal which increased in frequency as they got ‘older’.

The mini-organs are likely to be used to study brain developmen­t and investigat­e what goes wrong to cause conditions such as autism and epilepsy. The researcher­s face questions about the ethics of their work and say they are cautious not to get too close to recreating a human brain.

Their creations have no blood vessels, no brain hemisphere­s and are not in a skull.

Professor Alysson Muotri, senior author of the study from the University of California, San Diego, said: ‘It might be that in the future we will get something that is really close to the signals in the human brains that control behaviours, thoughts or memory.

But I don’t think we have any evidence right now to say we have any of those.’

The mini-organs, also known as brain ‘organoids’, can help to test how drugs might work on the brain. But to really work properly they have to be grown properly in the right ‘culture’ – the soup of nutrients which mimics conditions in the body to make stem cells differenti­ate into brain cells.

The study was published in the journal Stem Cell.

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