The brain's reserve cells can be activated after stroke

Jonas Frisén
Photo: Stefan Zimmerman
Jonas Frisén Photo: Stefan Zimmerman
Scientists at Karolinska Institutet have found a way of activating the neuronal reserves in the brains of mice by switching off the signal that inhibits the formation of new nerve cells. The study is presented in the online edition of the scientific. "So far, this is just basic research of no immediate practical significance, but the results are very exciting nonetheless," says Professor Jonas Frisén at the Department of Cell and Molecular Biology, who led the study. New nerve cells are formed from stem cells in specific areas of the human brain. This process increases after a stroke, something that might explain the recovery that is often observed in patients, particularly in the first year following the onset of illness. In the present study, the scientists have demonstrated how a type of cell that does not give rise to new cells in the healthy brain is activated after a stroke in laboratory animals. In addition to the stem cells that are normally active, there is therefore also a kind of reserve stock of cells the can be activated when demand increases.
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