• Our Supporters
  • Blog
  • Donations
  • Events
  • Contact
  • Our Supporters
  • Blog
  • Donations
  • Events
  • Contact
TwitterFacebookYouTube
Brainstreams Logo Brainstreams Logo
  • Resources
  • Videos
  • Learn
    • Healthy Brain
    • Injured Brain
      • Concussion
    • Healing Brain
      • Alcohol and Substance Use
      • Caregivers Need Care Too
      • Managing Problem Behaviours
      • Sexual Health and Intimacy
    • My Journey
      • Health Care Team
      • Making Transitions Easier
      • 10 Key Principles
    • Living Life
      • Advocacy and Legal Counsel
      • Driving Again
      • Funding Sources
      • Goal Setting
      • Healthy Living
      • Returning to Work
    • FAQs
  • Our Work
    • The BC Brain Injury Association
    • Our Projects
    • Our Supporters
  • The Journey Ahead
  • Resources
  • Videos
  • Learn
  • Our Work
  • COVID19 Info
  • Resources
  • Videos
  • Learn
    • Healthy Brain
    • Injured Brain
      • Concussion
    • Healing Brain
      • Alcohol and Substance Use
      • Caregivers Need Care Too
      • Managing Problem Behaviours
      • Sexual Health and Intimacy
    • My Journey
      • Health Care Team
      • Making Transitions Easier
      • 10 Key Principles
    • Living Life
      • Advocacy and Legal Counsel
      • Driving Again
      • Funding Sources
      • Goal Setting
      • Healthy Living
      • Returning to Work
    • FAQs
  • Our Work
    • The BC Brain Injury Association
    • Our Projects
    • Our Supporters
  • The Journey Ahead
  • Resources
  • Videos
  • Learn
  • Our Work
  • COVID19 Info

Widgetized Area

This panel is active and ready for you to add some widgets via the WP Admin

Brainstreams > Blog > Miniature ‘human brain’ grown in lab
HomePostsNews ArticlesMiniature ‘human brain’ grown in lab

Miniature ‘human brain’ grown in lab

Previous Next
Miniature ‘human brain’ grown in lab
Miniature “human brains” have been grown in a lab in a feat scientists hope will transform the understanding of neurological disorders.

The pea-sized structures reached the same level of development as in a nine-week-old foetus, but are incapable of thought.

The study, published in the journal Nature, has already been used to gain insight into rare diseases.

Neuroscientists have described the findings as astounding and fascinating.

The human brain is one of the most complicated structures in the universe.

Scientists at Institute of Molecular Biotechnology of the Austrian Academy of Sciences have now reproduced some of the earliest stages of the organ’s development in the laboratory.

Brain bath

They used either embryonic stem cells or adult skin cells to produce the part of an embryo that develops into the brain and spinal cord – the neuroectoderm.

This was placed in tiny droplets of gel to give a scaffold for the tissue to grow and was placed into a spinning bioreactor, a nutrient bath that supplies nutrients and oxygen.

The cells were able to grow and organise themselves into separate regions of the brain, such as the cerebral cortex, the retina, and, rarely, an early hippocampus, which would be heavily involved in memory in a fully developed adult brain.

The researchers are confident that this closely, but far from perfectly, matches brain development in a foetus until the nine week stage.

Read More and Watch Video>>

Admin2017-11-10T15:03:04-08:00August 29th, 2013|

Related Posts

  • The Road Ahead: Next Exit Hope! For Ages 5 and Up.

    The Road Ahead: Next Exit Hope! For Ages 5 and Up.

    April 29th, 2022
  • The Road Ahead: Next Exit Hope! For Ages 11 and Up.

    The Road Ahead: Next Exit Hope! For Ages 11 and Up.

    April 29th, 2022
  • FVBIA Employers Guide to ABI 2022

    FVBIA Employers Guide to ABI 2022

    April 29th, 2022
  • Virtual Caregivers Support Group

    Virtual Caregivers Support Group

    February 10th, 2022
  • Concussion Awareness Week in B.C. Sept. 26th – Oct. 2nd.

    Concussion Awareness Week in B.C. Sept. 26th – Oct. 2nd.

    September 20th, 2021

In This Section

  • Blog
  • Hot Topics
  • ICBC Accident Benefits Coverage
  • News Articles
  • Research
  • Survivors' Stories
  • Videos

The British Columbia Brain Injury Association
c/o Janelle Breese Biagioni
PO Box 37091 MILLSTREAM PO
Victoria, BC V9B 0E8

Sign up for our Newsletter


Brainstreams.ca is an online education and networking site for the Brain Injury Community in B.C. and beyond. The material on this web site is provided for educational purposes only, and is not to be used for medical advice, diagnosis or treatment.
© 2017 The British Columbia Brain Injury Association | Website by Affinity Bridge  

Notifications