Researchers propose lineage model for brain development

A new theory from scientists at Cold Spring Harbor Laboratory suggests that brain cells use their cellular family tree to organize into a complex organ. The model explains how a single starting cell can form a brain with roughly 170 billion precisely positioned neurons.

The research, published in the journal Neuron, challenges the long-standing emphasis on chemical signals alone for guiding cell placement. Instead, it highlights how descendant cells tend to remain near their ancestors, creating large-scale structures similar to how human populations spread over generations.

Stan Kerstjens, a postdoctoral researcher in Anthony Zador's lab, noted that cells must solve questions of location and identity. The team tested the lineage-based model through theoretical calculations, gene expression patterns in mouse brains, and experiments in zebrafish.

Collaborators included researchers from Harvard University and ETH Zürich. The findings indicate that lineage information may work alongside chemical signals, with potential applications to other tissues and self-replicating artificial intelligence systems.

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Microscopic illustration of migrating neurons in the developing brain showing DNA damage and repair.
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Developing neurons sustain and rapidly repair DNA double-strand breaks during migration, study finds

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A study in Nature reports that newborn neurons can incur double-strand DNA breaks while squeezing through tight spaces in the developing brain, and that healthy cells typically repair most of this damage within about a day.

An international research team has published the first complete map of neural connections spanning the brain and nerve cord of an adult fruit fly. The work reveals that many behaviors arise from distributed local circuits rather than centralized brain control. The connectome was released June 8 in the journal Nature.

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Researchers at Harvard Medical School have uncovered a hidden map of smell receptors in mice noses, revealing neat stripes instead of random distribution. This structure aligns with brain mapping, challenging prior assumptions about olfaction. The findings, published April 28 in Cell, could aid treatments for smell loss.

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