autism tagged posts

Adult Brain Prunes Branched Connections of New Neurons

A new Salk study is the first to closely follow the development of new neurons in the adult brain, giving insight into neurodevelopmental disorders such as autism and schizophrenia. By genetically engineering new neurons to fluoresce green, researchers were able to see when the new cells grew and branched surrounded by other cell nuclei (blue) in the brain. Credit: Salk Institute

A new Salk study is the first to closely follow the development of new neurons in the adult brain, giving insight into neurodevelopmental disorders such as autism and schizophrenia. By genetically engineering new neurons to fluoresce green, researchers were able to see when the new cells grew and branched surrounded by other cell nuclei (blue) in the brain. Credit: Salk Institute

A new study is first to closely follow development of new neurons in the adult brain, giving potential new insight into neurodevelopmental disorders such as autism and schizophrenia. New brain cells began with a period of overgrowth, sending out a plethora of neuronal branches, before the brain pruned back the connections. “We were surprised by the extent of the pruning we saw,” says Prof. Rusty Gage.

While most o...

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Gene a/w 5 main psychiatric disorders linked to brain cell death in mice

The Neuropsychiatric Disease-Associated Gene cacna1c Mediates Survival of Young Hippocampal Neurons

The Neuropsychiatric Disease-Associated Gene cacna1c Mediates Survival of Young Hippocampal Neurons

A new study shows the death of newborn brain cells may be linked to a genetic risk factor for schizophrenia, bipolar disorder, autism, ADHD, and depression, and at the same time shows a compound currently being developed for use in humans may have therapeutic value for these diseases by preventing the cells from dying.

In 2013, the largest genetic study of psychiatric illness to date implicated mutations in the gene called CACNA1C as a risk factor in 5 major forms of neuropsychiatric disease. All the conditions also share the common clinical feature of high anxiety...

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Blood-Brain Barrier breakthrough reported

Cornell researchers found that an FDA-approved drug called Lexiscan activates receptors -- called adenosine receptors -- that are expressed on BBB cells. Credit: Dr. Margaret Bynoe, College of Veterinary Medicine at Cornell University

Cornell researchers found that an FDA-approved drug called Lexiscan activates receptors — called adenosine receptors — that are expressed on BBB cells. Credit: Dr. Margaret Bynoe, College of Veterinary Medicine at Cornell University

Cornell researchers have discovered a way to penetrate the blood brain barrier (BBB) that may soon permit delivery of drugs directly into the brain to treat disorders such as Alzheimer’s disease and chemotherapy-resistant cancers. The BBB is a layer of endothelial cells that selectively allow entry of molecules needed for brain function, such as amino acids, oxygen, glucose and water, while keeping others out. An FDA-approved drug, Lexiscan activates adenosine receptors – that are expressed on these BBB cells.

“We can open the BBB for a brief window of time, lo...

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Newly Identified Pathway links Fetal Brain Development to Adult Social Behavior and embryonic Rx

Representative images of control (left) and Dvl mutants (right) embryonic brains at embryonic day 18.5 (E18.5, just before birth at E20) were stained with DAPI to highlight all of the nuclei (Blue), anti-Ctip2 (Green) for deep layer neurons and anti-Cux1 (Red) for more superficial layer neurons. Analysis of the results shows specific reduction of the deep layer (Ctip2+) neurons at E18.5. This reduction in deep layer neurons is preceded by a transient brain over growth at E14.5, associated with increased proliferation of neural progenitors and premature differentiation. Credit: Case Western Reserve University School of Medicine

Representative images of control (left) and Dvl mutants (right) embryonic brains at embryonic day 18.5 (E18.5, just before birth at E20) were stained with DAPI to highlight all of the nuclei (Blue), anti-Ctip2 (Green) for deep layer neurons and anti-Cux1 (Red) for more superficial layer neurons. Analysis of the results shows specific reduction of the deep layer (Ctip2+) neurons at E18.5. This reduction in deep layer neurons is preceded by a transient brain over growth at E14.5, associated with increased proliferation of neural progenitors and premature differentiation. Credit: Case Western Reserve University School of Medicine

Autism has been postulated to be caused by neuron overgrowth in the prenatal period, although the precise timing and cause of this overgrowth has been unknown...

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