Implanting stem cells into brain can restore memory

Posted: April 23, 2013 at 3:50 am

WASHINGTON: Scientists have for the first time transformed human embryonic stem cells into nerve cells to help mice regain the ability to learn and remember. The study by the University of Wisconsin-Madison in US is the first to show that human stem cells can successfully implant themselves in the brain and then heal neurological deficits.

Once inside the mouse brain, the implanted stem cells formed two common, vital types of neurons, which communicate with the chemicals GABA or acetylcholine.

"These two neuron types are involved in many kinds of human behaviour, emotions, learning, memory, addiction and many other psychiatric issues," said senior author Su-Chun Zhang, a professor of neuroscience and neurology.

The human embryonic stem cells were cultured in the lab, using chemicals that are known to promote development into nerve cells. After the transplant, the mice scored significantly better on common tests of learning and memory in mice.

The study began with deliberate damage to a part of the brain that is involved in learning and memory.

"Developing brain cells get their signals from the tissue that they reside in, and the location in the brain we chose directed these cells to form both GABA and cholinergic neurons," Zhang said. The initial destruction was in an area called the medial septum, which connects to the hippocampus by GABA and cholinergic neurons.

"This circuitry is fundamental to our ability to learn and remember," Zhang said. The transplanted cells, however, were placed in the hippocampus, a vital memory center. After the transferred cells were implanted, in response to chemical directions from the brain, they started to specialize and connect to the appropriate cells in the hippocampus.

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Implanting stem cells into brain can restore memory

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