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Exploring Mechanisms Human Brain

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Seminar✓ Recording AvailableNeuroscience

Exploring mechanisms of human brain expansion in cerebral organoids

Madeline Lancaster

Dr

MRC Laboratory of Molecular Biology, Cambridge

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Monday, May 16, 2022

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Monday, May 16, 2022

4:00 PM Europe/London

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Host: Cambridge Neuro

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Cambridge Neuro

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Abstract

The human brain sets us apart as a species, with its size being one of its most striking features. Brain size is largely determined during development as vast numbers of neurons and supportive glia are generated. In an effort to better understand the events that determine the human brain’s cellular makeup, and its size, we use a human model system in a dish, called cerebral organoids. These 3D tissues are generated from pluripotent stem cells through neural differentiation and a supportive 3D microenvironment to generate organoids with the same tissue architecture as the early human fetal brain. Such organoids are allowing us to tackle questions previously impossible with more traditional approaches. Indeed, our recent findings provide insight into regulation of brain size and neuron number across ape species, identifying key stages of early neural stem cell expansion that set up a larger starting cell number to enable the production of increased numbers of neurons. We are also investigating the role of extrinsic regulators in determining numbers and types of neurons produced in the human cerebral cortex. Overall, our findings are pointing to key, human-specific aspects of brain development and function, that have important implications for neurological disease.

Topics

3D microenvironmentape speciesbrain expansioncerebral organoidsextrinsic regulatorshuman fetal brainneural stem cellsneurodevelopmentneuron numberorganoidspluripotent stem cellsstem cells

About the Speaker

Madeline Lancaster

Dr

MRC Laboratory of Molecular Biology, Cambridge

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Personal Website

www.neuroscience.cam.ac.uk/directory/profile.php

@Mad_Lancaster

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twitter.com/Mad_Lancaster

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