WASHINGTON, May 24 (Xinhua) -- For the first time
anywhere, a researcher at the Hebrew University of Jerusalem in Israel has
succeeded in observing in vivo the generation of neurons in the brain of a
mammal, the American Association for the Advancement of Science reported
Thursday.
Dr. Adi Mizrahi used mouse models to study how
neurons, or nerve cells, develop from an undifferentiated cellular sphere into a
rich and complex cell.
This has great significance for the future of brain
research, said Dr. Mizrahi, since "the structural and functional complexity of
nerve cells remains one of the biggest mysteries of neuroscience, and we now
have a model to study this complexity directly."
The results of Dr. Mizrahi's groundbreaking work
appeared in the online edition of Nature Neuroscience.
Using special microscopic imaging techniques,
combined with virus gene technology, Dr. Mizrahi was able to develop an
experimental model to study development of neural dendrites in vivo. The
dendrites are the string-like extensions of the neuron that spread out to reach
other neurons and serve as the points of communication between the neurons.
The model employed by Dr. Mizrahi in his research was
the newborn neuron population which develops into the olfactory bulb of adult
mice, providing them with a sense of smell.
The development and maintenance of newborn neurons in
this area was assessed by time-lapse imaging over several days at different
stages of development.
Mizrahi revealed that dendritic formation is highly
dynamic. Moreover, once incorporated into the network, adult-born neurons in the
study also remained dynamic and capable of continuous change.
As for further research that some day could lead to
significant breakthroughs in treatment of neural disorders, Dr. Mizrahi noted
that "there are only a few small areas in the brain which are capable of
neurogenesis, and they hide secrets we want to reveal."