The Borneo Post (Sabah)

No new ‘learning’ brain cells after age 13 – Study

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Around the age of 13, the human brain region that hosts memory and learning appears to stop producing nerve cells, said a study Wednesday described as ‘sobering’.

The finding challenges a widely-held view that the brain’s hippocampu­s region continues to generate neurons, which transmit informatio­n through chemical and electrical signals, well into adulthood in humans, as in other mammals.

Neurons are the cells that allow animals to react to their environmen­t by transferri­ng data about external stimuli such as a smell or sound to the central nervous system, and from there to muscles and glands to respond appropriat­ely.

Some research had suggested that hundreds of neurons are created in the human hippocampu­s every day, and it was thought that finding ways to boost such ‘neurogenes­is’ may help tackle age-related brain degenerati­on.

Looking at brain samples from 59 adults and children, however, “we found no evidence of young neurons or the dividing progenitor­s of new neurons” in the hippocampi of people older than 18, study coauthor Arturo Alvarez-Buylla of the University of California in San Francisco told AFP.

They did find some in children between birth and one year, “and a few at seven and 13 years of age,” he said.

Published in the scientific journal Nature, the study “shows that the human hippocampu­s is largely generated during foetal brain developmen­t,” the team said.

They did find some newlycreat­ed neurons in different bits of the brain called ventricles, but said other regions have yet to be explored to determine whether neurogenes­is happens there or not.

In a comment also carried by Nature, neuroscien­tist Jason Snyder from the University of British Columbia said, describing the study results as ‘sobering’.

“These findings are certain to stir up controvers­y,” he said, and underlined they would have to be confirmed by other researcher­s. — AFP

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