Friday, April 14, 2023

DH23002 Growing Miniature Brains

When you first read this article you have to pinch yourself that it a real true science story and not something out of a fantasy. Growing lentil size “mini-brains” called organoids in Petri dishes sounds extraordinary. These are miniature versions of brains that can be grown for each species. In this experiment it was comparing the growth of the human brain with that of chimpanzees and gorillas because we have bigger brains. Read on.

 

Copyright@ Times Newspaper  Writer: Rhys Blakely

Cambridge lab grows small brains to answer the big questions

Thursday March 25 2021, 12.01am, The Times

Madeline Lancaster, front centre, with her Cambridge team, grew a human organoid.

Lentil-sized “mini brains” grown in Petri dishes have shed new light on what sets humans apart from the great apes.

By growing miniature versions of the brains of each of the species, scientists gained a first glimpse of what causes the human brain to grow much larger than those of chimpanzees and gorillas.

A two-day window, just a few weeks after conception, was found to be key. The activity of a single gene means that a certain type of stem cell maintains a cylindrical shape in humans for 48 hours longer than in our ape cousins. This allows the stem cells to multiply for longer, creating generations of daughter cells. This delay allows three times as many neurons to develop in the human brain, compared with that of a chimp.

Madeline Lancaster, of the Medical Research Council Laboratory of Molecular Biology in Cambridge, who led the study, said: “It’s remarkable that a relatively simple evolutionary change in cell shape could have major consequences in brain evolution. I feel like we’ve really learnt something fundamental about . . . what makes us human.”

The study involved growing miniature versions of brains, known as organoids, in a lab. During the early stages of brain development, neurons are made by stem cells called neural progenitors, whose cylindrical shape makes it easy for them to split into identical daughter cells. The more times they multiply at this stage, the more neurons the brain will have later.

Eventually the progenitor cells mature, adopt a shape similar to a stretched ice-cream cone, and stop dividing. In the mini brains, this shape change took about seven days for human cells and five for the apes. The extra days appear to help explain our much larger brains.

Researchers then compared which genes were turned on and off. A single gene, ZEB2, was found to be key. When switched off in the gorilla organoids, it slowed the maturation of the progenitor cells, while turning on the gene sooner in human progenitor cells led them to develop more like those in the ape organoids. 


For more detail on organoids that can be grown for a variety of body parts not just the brain follow the link below. Remember in vitro means in glass meaning in a laboratory setting. So it is the growing of small organs in a laboratory setting. The small organ being called a organoid. 

https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Organoid



Wednesday, April 5, 2023

DH23001 Deepak Chopra - the guy from Oprah

 So how can a guy who is a regular on the Oprah Winfrey show and had a slot on Megham Markle’s famous podcast warrant an entry in my scientific Digital Human blog? Well Deepak Chopra is a genius physician, alternative medicine advocate and author who has managed to acquire, unusually for an author, a high popular media profile. He is also someone who has written over 90 books on these subjects something that really impresses me as a novice writer.

His book called “Living in the Light” being about the deeper philosophy behind yoga which he co-authored with Sarah Platt-Finger. As someone who practised yoga for several years as a way of counter balancing a very stressful paid job it proved extremely effective and made me into a very positive “believer” in yoga practices. It is difficult to narrate why it works to those not practising yoga but take my word for it is extremely effective.

But the thing that appeals to me is that his fiercest critics are Richard Dawkins an evolutionary biologist and Brian Cox a physicist. Deepak Chopra as someone who sees the body as a “quantum mechanical object” whilst able to discuss serotonin, oxytocin and dopamine is my kind of expert. With comments like “creativity is a good use of imagination” and the “mind-body connection in disease” there is much to gain from this guy beyond his original calling card based him upon being a spiritual alternative medicine communicator. By the way I don’t see yoga as being spiritual and certainly not religious it being more about exerting an unusual physical real world control (using real chemicals) over your own consciousness and sub- consciousness to benefit you mentally and physically.

Deepak Chopra was also famous for “Quantum Healing” (1989) reissued in 2015 with Rudolph Tanzi, Harvard Professor of Neurology writing the Forward. Finally one of his latest books has evolved from the above Quantum Healing undertaken with a physicist Jack Tuszynski from the University of Alberta. He does regularly develop his ideas in these areas resulting in new book updates on these concepts. An author working with a neurologist and a physicist has to be a good candidate for the Digital Human blog.

 

To learn more about Deepak Chopra follow the links below

 

Times Newspaper Article using their PageSuite storage and display capability.

https://edition.pagesuite.com/popovers/dynamic_article_popover.aspx?artguid=0097a0ee-50fc-4188-9aab-9abee8c6ddc4

 

Wikipedia entry for Deepak Chopra

https://en.wikipedia.org/w/index.php?title=Deepak_Chopra&oldid=1148060054

Deepak Chopra's  own website

http://www.deepakchopra.com