New Source of Replacement Brain Cells Found

Researchers were able to purify and grow highly adaptable cells called adult human neural progenitors from mature human brain tissue. The progenitor cells could be useful in the development of therapies and diagnostics for brain disease. The green marker indicates a support brain cells and the red marker indicates the presence of a protein normally found in stem cells. Blue marks the cells' nucleus.
(Image credit: Noah Walton/UF McKnight Brain Institute)

Scientists have found that a common type of human brain cell can transform into other cell types and reproduce indefinitely—tricks once thought exclusive to stem cells.

The mature human brain cells were extracted from epilepsy patients and coaxed into other types of brain cells in a lab. The human cells also transformed into different types of brain tissue when transplanted into the brains of mice.

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