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Scientists Inject Human Brain Cells Into Mice, Making Them ‘Significantly Smarter’

Saturday, December 27, 2014 16:03
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Scientists from the University of Rochester say they have made mice significantly smarter by injecting them at a young age with human brain cells, according to a study published in the journal Cell Stem Cell.

The researchers used immature glial cells removed from human fetuses that had been donated for research. Glial cells are a type of nerve cell that do not transmit signals (as neurons do) but provide a wide variety of other important functions for the nervous system, including forming the myelin sheath around nerve cells and supporting the neurons.

Once injected, the human cells began to destroy native mouse glial cells and began to take over the animal’s brain.

Mouse cells wiped out

“We could see the human cells taking over the whole space,” researcher Steve Goldman said. “It seemed like the mouse counterparts were fleeing to the margins.”

The immature glial cells took the form of mature glial cells known as astrocytes, due to their star-like shape. Astrocytes are known to help strengthen the connections (synapses) between neurons and help coordinate electrical communication across synapses.

Within a year’s time, the 300,000 injected human cells had multiplied to 12 million astrocytes and had completely replaced all mouse astrocytes. The mouse neurons, however, seemed unaffected by this process.

Because human astrocytes are 10 to 20 times bigger than mouse astrocytes and have 100 times more tendrils, they can coordinate many more neuronal signals at a much higher speed. Therefore, the researchers hypothesized that mice with human astrocytes would be smarter than other mice.

A series of standard cognition and memory tests seemed to confirm this hypothesis. The mice with hybrid human brains learned significantly faster, navigated mazes better and had better memories than a control group with non-modified brains.

“These were whopping effects,” Goldman said. “We can say they were statistically and significantly smarter than control mice.”

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Source: http://truthisscary.com/2014/12/scientists-inject-human-brain-cells-into-mice-making-them-significantly-smarter/

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