Scientists grow 'mini-brain on the move' that can contract muscle

Cambridge researchers grew ‘organoid’ that spontaneously connected to spinal cord

Scientists have grown a miniature brain in a dish with a spinal cord and muscles attached, an advance that promises to accelerate the study of conditions such as motor neurone disease.

The lentil-sized grey blob of human brain cells were seen to spontaneously send out tendril-like connections to link up with the spinal cord and muscle tissue, which was taken from a mouse. The muscles were then seen to visibly contract under the control of the so-called brain organoid.

The research is is the latest in a series of increasingly sophisticated approximations of the human brain grown in the laboratory – this time with something approaching a central nervous system attached.

Madeline Lancaster, who led the work at the Medical Research Council’s Laboratory of Molecular Biology in Cambridge, said: “We like to think of them as mini-brains on the move.”

The scientists used a new method to grow the miniature brain from human stem cells, which allowed the organoid to reach a more sophisticated stage of development than previous experiments. The latest blob shows similarities, in terms of the variety of neurons and their organisation, to the human foetal brain at 12-16 weeks of pregnancy.

However, the scientists said the structure was still too small and primitive to have anything approaching thoughts, feelings or consciousness.

“It’s still a good idea to have that discussion every time we take it a step further,” said Lancaster. “But we agree generally that we’re still very far away from that.”

While a fully developed human brain has 80-90bn neurons, the organoid has a couple of million, placing it somewhere between a cockroach and a zebrafish in terms of volume of grey matter.

Previously, the sophistication of the organoids scientists had been able to achieve had been limited by the lack of a nutrient supply to the centre of the blob. Once it reached a certain size, the neurons in the centre would become cut off from their nutrient supply and start to die off, and the structure would stop developing.

In the latest research, the scientists grew the organoid and then used a tiny vibrating blade to cut it into half millimetre-thick slices which were placed on a membrane, floating on a nutrient-rich liquid. This meant the entire slice had access to energy and oxygen and it continued developing and forming new connections when it was kept in culture for a year.

Alongside the organoid, the scientists added in a 1mm-long spinal cord, taken from a mouse embryo, and the surrounding back muscle. The brain cells automatically began to send out neuronal connections, linked up with the spinal cord and began sending electrical impulses, which caused the muscles to twitch.

The ambition is to use systems like this to study how the human brain and nervous system develop and why things go wrong in illnesses such as motor neurone disease, epilepsy and schizophrenia.

“Obviously we’re not just trying to create something for the fun of it,” said Lancaster. “We want to use this to model diseases and to understand how these networks are set up in the first place.”

Gray Camp, a geneticist at the Institute of Molecular and Clinical Ophthalmology in Basel, Switzerland, who was not involved in the latest work, described the advance as “a big step for the field”. “It’s extremely exciting to see evidence of functional nerve tracts growing out of developing human brain tissue and innervating other tissues,” he said.

The findings are published in the journal Nature Neuroscience.

Contributor

Hannah Devlin Science correspondent

The GuardianTramp

Related Content

Article image
Human neurons transplanted into rats to help study brain disorders
Groundbreaking research could throw light on how cells from patients with neuropsychiatric disorders malfunction

Ian Sample Science editor

12, Oct, 2022 @3:07 PM

Article image
MS could be reversed by activating stem cells in brain, new study suggests

Stem cells have been stimulated to regenerate the myelin sheath that is damaged in multiple sclerosis (MS)

Alok Jha, science correspondent

05, Dec, 2010 @5:59 PM

Article image
Schizophrenia breakthrough as genetic study reveals link to brain changes
Discovery of a link between genes which play a key role in brain development and a heightened risk of schizophrenia raises hopes for future therapies

Haroon Siddique

27, Jan, 2016 @6:00 PM

Article image
This may be a turning point in treating neurodegenerative diseases
Success in trials for Huntington’s and Spinal Muscular Atrophy, raises hopes that diseases such as Alzheimer’s and ALS could be tackled using a new class of drugs

Hannah Devlin Science correspondent

15, Dec, 2017 @5:37 PM

Article image
Schizophrenia study finds evidence of reduced links between brain cells
Pioneering research on living patients could pave way for new and better treatment

Hannah Devlin Science correspondent

14, Jan, 2020 @1:42 PM

Article image
Brain cells grown in the lab will help to identify new Alzheimer's drugs

Embryonic stem cells can be used to create almost limitless supplies of the brain cell linked to memory loss in Alzheimer's

Ian Sample, science correspondent

04, Mar, 2011 @8:22 AM

Article image
Neural stem cells injected into the brain of a stroke patient in world first

Researchers hope the brain stem cells will stimulate the growth of new neurons and reduce inflammation caused by the stroke

Ian Sample, science correspondent

16, Nov, 2010 @1:03 PM

Article image
Organ transplants from 'chimera' pigs face hurdles, say geneticists
Warning of difficulties comes after injection of human stem cells into pig embryos and fears that animals’ brains could be altered

Nicola Davis

06, Jun, 2016 @6:58 PM

Article image
Cloning scientists create human brain cells

Scientists in Edinburgh who pioneered cloning have made a technological breakthrough that could pave the way for better medical treatment of mental illnesses and nerve diseases

Robin McKie

29, Jan, 2012 @12:07 AM

Article image
Gene that makes human brain unique identified by scientists
Key DNA strand propels neuron growth in brain’s region central to reasoning, language and sensory perception

Ian Sample, science editor

26, Feb, 2015 @7:00 PM