Category Archives: Neuroscience

Yale study: Early exposure to neuropsychiatry in college could attract more neuroscience majors to psychiatry – Yale News

February 16, 2017

Brain-based specialties like neurology are attracting more undergraduate neuroscience majors than psychiatry in medical school, a trend two Yale researchers say could be improved with more early exposure to neuropsychiatry in college.

Matthew N. Goldenberg, MD, Assistant Professor of Psychiatry, and John H. Krystal, MD, Robert L. McNeil, Jr. Professor of Neuroscience and Chair of the Yale Department of Psychiatry analyzed U.S. medical school matriculation and graduation data from 2013 and 2014. They found that medical students with an undergraduate neuroscience major showed a preference for neurology (21.5 percent) at the start of medical school compared to 13.1 percent for neurosurgery and 11 percent for internal medicine. Only 2.3 percent preferred psychiatry.

Psychiatry generated more interest by the time medical students graduated, with 5.1 percent of undergraduate neuroscience majors choosing the specialty. Interest in neurology and neurosurgery showed a slight decline by graduation, according to the study, published online in the journal Academic Psychiatry.

Psychiatry struggles to attract neuroscience majors to the specialty, the authors wrote. This missed opportunity is an obstacle to developing the neuroscience literacy of the workforce and jeopardizes the neuroscientific future of our field.

They said communicating advances in psychiatric neuroscience to college students and providing more early training and exposure to neuropsychiatry might spark more interest in the specialty.

Having psychiatric medical school faculty members partner with undergraduate neuroscience course leaders to serve as visiting lecturers or otherwise assist in embuing clinical neuroscience into curricula may be one approach, they wrote. There is evidence that scientists visits to undergraduate classrooms improve student attitudes toward neuroscience.

Efforts should be made to have college neuroscience students visit psychiatry training programs or work in laboratories that focus on psychiatric neuroscience, the researchers wrote.

Data indicates neuroscience majors show more interest in psychiatry over the course of medical school. This trend mirrors the growing interest in psychiatry among all students during medical school and suggests that certain aspect (s) of the medical school experience make psychiatry more appealing, the authors wrote. The increase further suggests that initial ignorance about the field is a major stumbling block to recruiting students into psychiatry.

The researchers did not determine why some neuroscience majors switched to psychiatry, but they wrote that a positive experience with their clerkship and placing a high value on work-life balance might be factors.

This article was submitted by Christopher S Gardner on February 16, 2017.

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Yale study: Early exposure to neuropsychiatry in college could attract more neuroscience majors to psychiatry - Yale News

Neuroscience firm plots Barnsley expansion – Insider Media

One of the UK's largest neuroscience research companies is to open a new site in Barnsley this month, creating 12 jobs.

MAC Clinical Research, which has operations in Manchester, Leeds, Blackpool, Cannock and Liverpool, specialises in clinical trials for Alzheimer's disease, diabetes, osteoarthritis, eczema, psoriasis, central nervous system conditions and depression.

It currently employs a workforce of 150.

Now, it is moving into 4,800 sq ft office space at Wentworth Office Park.

MAC has invested 500,000 in the site and has been supported by Enterprising Barnsley, the business development arm of Barnsley Council.

Dr Mark Dale, chief executive of MAC Clinical Research, said: "The move into Barnsley is a natural expansion for us and will see us get more heavily involved in the South Yorkshire market.

"In the not too distant future, we're looking to open up more research sites across Yorkshire."

Martin Beasley, Enterprising Barnsley group leader, added: "MAC Clinical Research is now starting to get the staff in place to become fully operational. We wish them all the best and look forward to working with them in the future."

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Neuroscience firm plots Barnsley expansion - Insider Media

Tools for neuroscience research – Scientist Live

Amsbio has published a new 25-page Neuroscience catalogue that details its extensive range of specific tools and reagents to enable researchers stay at the forefront of their field.

Cellular models are key tools that open the door to numerous neuroscience applications including neurodegeneration, neurogensis and developmental diseases.

With the discovery that neural stem cells exist in the adult brain many researchers are now seeking to use these cells in in vitro studies.

To restore normal function in numerous disorders, including Parkinson's Disease and Alzheimers Disease, neural stem cell transplantation is an important emerging strategy.

Furthermore, the recent advent of iPSC and genome editing technology, including CRISPR, has transformed the scope of neuroscience research allowing the generation of isogenic models and the ability to obtain large numbers of neural stem cells, which had been traditionally difficult to obtain.

As many researchers acknowledge the importance of studying the behaviour of neurons, glial cells and neural stem cells with a physiologically relevant context the importance of 3D cell culture has grown.

Beautifully illustrated the new catalogue provides detailed information on the latest neural stem cells, cell culture media/supplements, matrices, scaffolds, cryopreservation media and neural transfection products available from Amsbio.

Link:
Tools for neuroscience research - Scientist Live

Optogenetics: What Makes It a Powerful Neuroscience Tool? – Labiotech.eu (blog)

Its a brand-new field and possibilities seem infinite. Heres what you need to know about its rapid development intoa powerful genetic tool.

What if you could activate and deactivate neurons by simply switching on the lights? Thats the basis of optogenetics, the control of cell behavior via light-sensitive proteins.

Optogenetics is a very young field, thought to have started back in 2002, which has significantly grown over the last decade. Since then, it has been explored as a method to restore eyesight, to treat arrhythmiaand toprecisely control the growth ofbacteria.

But one of the areas where it presents more potential is neuroscience. The technology allows for the control of specific neurons in living animals and monitoring the effects in real time. It can be used to preciselymap brain circuits responsible for a particular behavior, such as fear or drug addiction, and as a therapy for neurological diseases like epilepsyor Parkinsons. Neurons can be easily controlled using a method that is fast, with responses at the millisecond scale, reversible and cell specific.

As it name indicates, optogenetics relies on genes to introduce light-sensitive proteins in specific cells. These proteins are most commonlyopsins, membrane proteins that transform optical input into electrochemical signals within the cell. These proteins can be found in the retina, but those used in optogenetics are typically of microbial originbecause they have a simpler structure and transmit signals faster.

When the opsin is excited, it induces the exchange of ions across the membrane, changing its potential and either activating or inhibiting neuronal activity. The fast reaction time of the proteins allows a researcher to test how different frequencies in the light pulses affect behavior. And since different opsins are excited by light atspecific wavelengthsit is possible to combine several of them in a single animal.

The possibilities seem unlimited, butfor the technique to work properly, efficient delivery and expression of opsin genes to the target neuronsare critical.

Lentiviral vectors are one of the tools of choice for genetic engineering in optogenetics. Viral vectorstake less effort and time than creating transgenic lines. And among them, lentiviral vectors have a larger capacity, which allows including several elements, such as largepromoter andreporter genes, in the final construct.

Here is where GEG Tech comes in. The French company has an extensivecatalog of lentiviral vectors to choose from, with a big selection for optogenetics applications. Its scientists have edited and created lentiviral vectors with different features to match the needs of any particular application. For example, theycan control if gene expression is eithertransient or long-term and whether the genetic material is integrated into the host, as well as include multiple promoters and reporters. And if aclient needs another promoter or another reporter, GEG Tech will design a customized new lentiviral vector.

The company also offers help for lentiviral vector users through explanatory videos, online protocols and extensive information on the properties, safety and regulations concerning the genetic tools. If you want to know more, pay a visit to GEG Techswebsite!

Despite being a very young field, optogenetics is alreadystarting to make noise in the biotech industry. Well bring you the latest news as more and more applications of the technology emerge in coming years.

Images from Sergey Nivens /Shutterstock; Biological Psychiatry (2015) 71, 12;Deisseroth K. et al.; 2015; GEG Tech

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Optogenetics: What Makes It a Powerful Neuroscience Tool? - Labiotech.eu (blog)

Neuroscience: New nerves for old : Nature : Nature Research – Nature.com

Greg Iger/Keck Medicine of USC

Kristopher Boesen, who broke his neck in a car accident, regained the ability to move his arms and hands after his spinal cord was injected with stem cells.

Two years after having a stroke at 31, Sonia Olea Coontz remained partially paralysed on her right side. She could barely move her arm, had slurred speech and needed a wheelchair to get around. In 2013, Coontz enrolled in a small clinical trial. The day after a doctor injected stem cells around the site of her stroke, she was able to lift her arm up over her head and speak clearly. Now she no longer uses a wheelchair and, at 36, is pregnant with her first child.

Coontz is one of stem-cell therapy's miracle patients, says Gary Steinberg, chair of neurosurgery at Stanford School of Medicine in California, and Coontz's doctor. Conventional wisdom said that her response was impossible: the neural circuits damaged by the stroke were dead. Most neuroscientists believed that the window for functional recovery extends to only six months after the injury.

Stem-cell therapies have shown great promise in the repair of brain and spinal injuries in animals. But animal models often behave differently from humans nervous-system injuries in rats, for example, heal more readily than they do in people. Clinical trial results have been mixed. Interesting signals from small trials have faded away in larger ones. There are plenty of unknowns: which stem cells are the right ones to use, what the cells are doing when they work and how soon after an injury they can be used.

The field is still young. Stem cells are poorly understood, and so is what happens after a spinal-cord injury or stroke. Yet, there are success stories, such as Coontz's, which seem to show that therapy using the right sort of stem cell can lead to functional improvements when tried in the right patients and at the right time following an injury. Researchers are fired up to determine whether stem-cell therapies can help people who are paralysed to regain some speech and motor control and if so, what exactly is going on.

Neurologists seeking functional restoration are up against the limited ability of the human central nervous system to heal. The biology of the brain and spinal cord seems to work against neuroregeneration, possibly because overgrowth of nerves could lead to faulty connections in the finely patterned architecture of the brain and spine, says Mark Tuszynski, a neurologist at the University of California, San Diego. Local chemical signals in the central nervous system tamp down growth. Over time, scarring develops, which prevents the injury from spreading, but also keeps cells from entering the site.

It's really hard to fix the biology, says Charles Yu Liu, a neurosurgeon and director of the University of Southern California Neurorestoration Center in Los Angeles. Stem cells seem to promise a workaround.

So far, neural regeneration cell therapy has had only anecdotal success, leaving investors and patients disappointed. In people with Parkinson's disease, for example, neurosurgeons replaced dead and dying dopamine-producing neurons with fetal neurons. Although initial results were promising, in larger studies, patients reported involuntary movements. Another effort tried treating people who'd had a stroke with cells derived from tumours; the results were mixed, and researchers were uneasy about the cells' cancerous source.

In recent years, researchers have had success with stem cells coaxed to develop into particular cell types, such as neural support cells. Tuszynski has showed how well stem cells can work at least, in animal models1. His group implanted neural stem cells derived from human fetal tissue into rats with severe spinal-cord injuries. Seven weeks later, the cells had bridged the gap where the spinal cord had been cut and the animals were able to walk again. The cells used in the study were manufactured by Neuralstem of Rockville, Maryland. The group has shown that other kinds of stem cell, including those derived from adult tissue, also work. Tuszynski has seen similar results in a rat spinal-cord-injury model, using neural stem cells made from the tissues of a healthy 86-year-old volunteer2.

Mark Tuszynski/Ken Kadoya/Ref. 3

Regeneration of axons (red) beyond implanted neural progenitor cells (green) in a rat with a spinal injury.

But animal studies are also making it clear that simply regrowing the connective wiring of the nervous system to bridge damaged areas is not enough, says Zhigang He, who studies neural repair at the Harvard Stem Cell Institute in Cambridge, Massachusetts. No matter what the animal model is, he says, the axons don't always grow into the right places. It's not enough to have a nerve, that nerve must become part of a functional circuit.

There is growing evidence that besides becoming replacement nerves, stem cells perform other functions they also seem to generate a supportive milieu that may encourage the natural recovery process or prevent further damage after an injury. Many types of neural stem cell secrete a mix of molecules that unlock suppressed growth pathways in nerves. Earlier this year, Tuszynski reported that any sort of spinal-cord stem cell, whether derived from adult tissues or embryos, from humans, rats or mice, could trigger native neural regeneration in rats3. But his success in rats has not yet translated into clinical trials. More work is needed, Tuszynski says, to determine which type of cell will work best for which particular injury.

For people who have had a stroke or spinal-cord injury, physical therapy is currently the best hope for recovery in the weeks and months after the injury. The brain is plastic and can co-opt other circuits and pathways to compensate for damage and to restore function. Once the inflammation ebbs and the brain adjusts, people can start to regain function. But the window of opportunity is short. Most people don't make functional gains after six months.

That timeline is why the remarkable recovery enjoyed by Coontz and other patients with chronic stroke in the same clinical trial is so surprising, says Steinberg. This changes our whole notion of recovery, he says. There were 18 people in the trial Coontz took part in, and all were treated using stem cells manufactured by SanBio of Mountain View, California. The company's cells are bone-marrow-derived mesenchymal stem cells. The cells are treated with a DNA fragment that is transiently expressed in them, and causes changes in their protein-expression patterns. In animal studies, these cells promote the migration and growth of native neural stem cells, among other effects.

The trial, which was designed to look at safety as well as efficacy, recruited patients after an ischaemic stroke. During this kind of stroke, a clot cuts off the blood supply to part of the brain, causing significant damage. Patients in the trial had all had ischaemic strokes deep in the brain 736 months earlier past the 6-month window for significant recovery. Each patient was injected with either 2.5 million, 5 million or 10 million of SanBio's cells4. Steinberg has followed participants for 24 months; an interim study at 12 months reported that most patients showed functional improvements. Some, like Coontz, achieved almost complete recovery.

What is not clear, however, is what the stem-cell injections do in the brain. In animal studies, the SanBio cells do not turn into neurons, but seem to send supporting signals to native cells in the brain. Indeed, preclinical research shows that the cells do not integrate into the brain most die after 12 months. Instead, the cells seem to secrete growth factors that encourage the formation of new neurons and blood vessels, and foster connections called synapses between neurons. And in rats, the nerve-cell connections that extended from one side of the brain to the other, as well as into the spinal cord, lasted, even though the injected cells did not4.

But these mechanisms are not sufficient to explain Coontz's overnight restoration of function, says Steinberg. He is entertaining several hypotheses, including that the needle used to deliver the cells may have had some effect. One week after treatment, we saw abnormalities in the premotor cortex that went away after one month, he says. The size of these microlesions was strongly correlated with recovery at 12 months. A similar effect can happen when electrodes are implanted in the brains of people with Parkinson's, although this deep-brain stimulation quietens tremors for only a short time. The people who'd had a stroke had a lasting recovery, suggesting that both the needle and the stem cells may have played a part.

The SanBio trial was small, and did not have a placebo control; the company is now recruiting for a larger phase II trial. Of the 156 participants that will be recruited, two-thirds will have cells injected the others will have a sham surgery. Even the trial surgeons, including Steinberg, will not know who is getting which treatment. The main outcome measure will be whether patients' motor-skill scores improve on a test called the Fugl-Meyer Motor scale six months after treatment. Participants will be monitored for at least 12 months, and will also be evaluated with tests that look for changes in gait and dexterity. Meanwhile, Steinberg plans to study microlesions in animal models of stroke to determine whether they do have a role in recovery.

An ongoing clinical trial evaluating escalating doses of neural stem cells in patients with acute spinal-cord injuries is also looking promising. Asterias Biotherapeutics of Fremont, California, coaxes the cells to develop into progenitors of oligodendrocytes, a type of support cell that's found in the brain and spinal cord and that creates a protective insulation for neuronal axons.

The trial tests the safety and efficacy of administering these cells to people with recent cervical, or neck-level, spinal-cord injury. Interim results for patients who had received the two lower doses were presented at the International Spinal Cord Society meeting in September. After 90 days, 4 patients who received 10 million cells showed improved motor function; a fifth patient had not reached the 90-day mark yet. At one year, the three patients receiving a lower dose of two million cells showed measurable improvement in motor skills.

These cells were initially developed by Geron, a biotechnology company that has since moved away from regenerative medicine. Before spinning out Asterias in 2013, Geron had run a safety trial of the cells in people with a chronic lower-back injury. No issues were identified, and the US Food and Drug Administration agreed to let the company test the cells in patients who'd been recently injured. Asterias focused the current trial on patients with cervical injuries because these are closer to the brain, so new nerve cells have a shorter distance to grow to gain functional improvements. People with severe cervical spine injuries are typically paralysed below the level of the damage. The company's hope is to restore arm and hand function for people with such injuries, potentially making a tremendous difference to a person's independence and quality of life.

Asterias seems to have realized this hope in at least one patient who received one of the higher doses. Kristopher Boesen, who is 21, has had a dramatic recovery. In March, Boesen's car fishtailed in a rainstorm; he hit a telephone pole and broke his neck. About a month later, Boesen was still paralysed below the injury, and his neurological improvements seemed to have plateaued. His doctors at a trauma centre in Bakersfield, California, were in touch with Liu, who is an investigator in the Asterias trial. As soon as he was stable, Boesen travelled to Los Angeles to join the trial.

Liu injected Boesen's spinal cord with Asterias's cells in April. Two days later, Boesen started to move his hands, and in the summer, he regained the ability to move the toes on one foot.

Asterias Biotherapeutics

A surgeon prepares to inject stem cells to treat a spinal injury as part of Asterias's clinical trial.

Liu is excited about Boesen's response. He was looking at being quadriplegic, and now he's able to write, lift some weights with his hands, and use his phone, says Liu. For somebody to improve like this is highly unusual I want to be jumping out of my shoes. But Liu cautions that this is still a small trial, and that Boesen's response is just one anecdotal report. Until the results are borne out in a large, placebo-controlled clinical trial, Liu will remain earthbound.

The trial is currently recruiting between 5 and 8 patients for another cohort that will receive a doubled dose of 20 million cells. As the trial goes on, Asterias hopes to find clues about the underlying mechanism. We're looking at changes in the anatomy of the injury, says the company's chief scientific officer, Jane Lebkowski. She says that there is some evidence that axons have traversed the injury site in patients who have recovered function. Preclinical work suggests that the cells might be sending growth-encouraging chemical signals to the native tissue. And, as support cells, the astrocytes may also be preventing more neurons from dying in the aftermath of the acute spinal injury.

Not all clinical trials have performed so well. The SanBio and Asterias results are positive signals in a sea of negative or mixed trials. For example, StemCells of Newark, California, terminated its phase II trial of stem cells for the treatment of spinal-cord injury in May, and shortly afterwards announced that it will restructure its business. The company declined to comment for this article.

Physicians such as Liu and Steinberg temper their public enthusiasm about stem-cell therapies, so as not to give false hope to desperate patients. People with paralysing injuries or those who have a neurodegenerative disease are easy marks for unscrupulous stem-cell clinics, whose therapies are not only unproven, but also come with risks.

Patients say, 'Go ahead, doc, you can't make me any worse,' says Keith Tansey, a neurologist and researcher at the Methodist Rehabilitation Center in Jackson, Mississippi, and president-elect of the American Spinal Injury Association. Unfortunately, that is not the case. Cell therapies given at a clinic, outside the context of a clinical trial, can lead to chronic pain, take away what little function a patient has left and render a patient ineligible for future studies, says Tansey. He has seen the consequences in his clinical practice. I treated a kid who had two different tumours in his spinal cord from two different individuals' cells, he says.

Many unanswered questions remain about whether stem cells can heal the central nervous system in people, and how they might do it. Researchers also don't know what cells are the best to use. Is it enough for them to grow into supportive cells that send friendly growth signals, or is it better that they grow into replacement neurons? The answer is likely to differ depending on the site and nature of the disease or injury. If the stem cells are producing supportive factors that encourage growth and repair, it might be possible, says He, to discern what these are and give them directly to patients. But biologists are not yet close to deciphering the recipe for such a cocktail.

Every time we get an experiment done we realize it's more complex than we thought it would be.

Tansey agrees that there are many unknowns and these seem to be multiplying. Every time we get an experiment done we realize it's more complex than we thought it would be, he says. Tansey thinks that the best way to resolve such uncertainties is with carefully regulated clinical trials. Rat models will only tell us so much the human nervous system is much larger and is wired differently. If stem cells help patients such as Coontz and Boesen to regain their speech and give them greater independence without adverse effects, then it makes sense to continue, he says, even without knowing all the details of how they work.

Until these positive, but small, results are replicated in larger, controlled clinical trials, neurologists are containing their optimism. I'd like to hear of any clinical trial that has more than an anecdotal benefit, says Tansey. And Liu is anticipating the day when he won't need to control his elation. In a few years, perhaps there will be a genuine opportunity to jump for joy.

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Neuroscience: New nerves for old : Nature : Nature Research - Nature.com

Fighting Depression? Neuroscience Says This May Reduce … – Inc.com

Depression is one of the most common mental health disorders in the United States. It affects over 15 million adults annually, or 6-7 percent of the entire adult population. It is so common, in fact, that nearly everyone has either been affected by it personally or is involved in some way with someone who has/is.

Depression has serious costs to both individuals as well as employers. Major Depressive Disorder is the leading cause of disability in the U.S. in those aged 15 to 44, and depression is estimated to cost employers up to $44 billion annually. It ranks third in workplace issues, preceded only by family crisis and stress.

Now, neuroscience research has identified a stunningly effective yet simple way to significantly reduce depression symptoms: combining aerobic exercise with meditation.

The study comes out of work on neurogenesis, the study of how new neurons are created and develop in the brain.

In essence, neurogenesis researchers hypothesized that as depressive symptoms emerge, the production of new cells decreases. They noted that trauma and stressful life events are already known to impair neurogenesis, and that the literature has already established that aerobic exercise can significantly increase the number of new cells a brain creates.

The problem is what happens after aerobic exercise: a great number of new cells die just weeks after being created. And if they don't join the brain's circuitry, they can't bolster the brain, uplift mood, help a person experience resilience, or create a more robust sense of wellbeing.

Fortunately, while new neurons can die, they can also be rescued, which is where meditation comes in. It turns out that when novel learning experiences challenge the mind, new neurons are "saved."

"Mental training can rescue new neurons from death as long as the learning experience is new and effortful," the researchers state. "Collectively, these findings suggest that aerobic exercise increases the production of new neurons in the adult brain, while effortful mental training experiences keep a significant number of those cells alive."

The study, published in Translational Psychiatry, outlined how the research was conducted: The neuroscientists developed a mental and physical (MAP) training plan for participants, which combined focused attention meditation with aerobic exercise.

Both the control group and the group with major depressive disorder (MDD) started with 30 minutes of focused attention meditation, followed by 30 minutes of aerobic exercise. They completed this combination twice a week.

During the meditation portion, participants were instructed to focus on the present moment, refocusing on their breathing if thoughts drifted to the past or future. According to research, this helps those with depression (not to mention the rest of us) "accept moment-to-moment changes in attention." This was followed by 30 minutes of "moderate-intensity" aerobic exercise.

Remarkably, the study found a nearly 40 percent decrease in depressive symptoms after just eight weeks of the training. They described these results as "robust."

As Tracey Shors, one of the study authors said, "Scientists have known for a while that both of these activities alone can help with depression ... But this study suggests that when done together, there is a striking improvement in depressive symptoms along with increases in synchronized brain activity."

The researchers also pointed out that while the norm for treating depression has involved the prescription of psychotropic drugs like Zoloft, Prozac, Celexa, and Lexapro, these drugs can have limited efficacy and can also lead to intense and disruptive side effects. Part of the excitement over these results is the fact that the practices involved are free, immediately accessible, and have no adverse side effects.

Interestingly, in addition to student participants, the research group also provided MAP training to young mothers living at a residential treatment facility. The young women involved had experienced homelessness in the past, and had displayed severe depressive symptoms as well as elevated levels of anxiety.

After eight weeks of MAP, they too reported a significant reduction in symptoms of both depression and anxiety. They reported feeling much more motivated and able to focus positively on their lives -- at a time when such an attitude was imperative.

"We know these therapies can be practiced over a lifetime and that they will be effective in improving mental and cognitive health," said lead researcher Brandon Alderman. "The good news is that this intervention can be practiced by anyone at any time and at no cost."

Amen.

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Fighting Depression? Neuroscience Says This May Reduce ... - Inc.com

AMSBIO publishes new catalogue that details cutting edge tools for neuroscience research – News-Medical.net

February 9, 2017 at 1:57 AM

AMSBIO has published a new 25-page Neuroscience catalogue that details its extensive range of specific tools and reagents to enable researchers stay at the forefront of their field.

Cellular models are key tools that open the door to numerous neuroscience applications including neurodegeneration, neurogensis and developmental diseases. With the discovery that neural stem cells exist in the adult brain many researchers are now seeking to use these cells in in vitro studies. To restore normal function in numerous disorders, including Parkinson's Disease and Alzheimers Disease, neural stem cell transplantation is an important emerging strategy. Furthermore, the recent advent of iPSC and genome editing technology including CRISPR has transformed the scope of neuroscience research allowing the generation of isogenic models and the ability to obtain large numbers of neural stem cells, which had been traditionally difficult to obtain. As many researchers acknowledge the importance of studying the behaviour of neurons, glial cells and neural stem cells with a physiologically relevant context the importance of 3D cell culture has grown.

Beautifully illustrated the new catalogue provides detailed information on the latest neural stem cells, cell culture media / supplements, matrices, scaffolds, cryopreservation media and neural transfection products available from AMSBIO.

AMSBIO is a leading transatlantic based source for neural cells, media and supplements including iPSC-derived cells. The company's large range of substrates and matrices including natural extracellular matrices and artificial scaffolds give you numerous options to develop your in vitro system. AMSBIO also offer proteins, specialised antibodies, ELISA kits, cryopreservation media and an extensive biorepository with neural tissue from numerous species. AMSBIO has an active program of cooperation with leading labs around the world enabling it to continually add new resources to its cutting edge neuroscience range.

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Posted in: Device / Technology News | Medical Science News | Medical Research News

Tags: 3D Cell Culture, Antibodies, Brain, Cell, Cell Culture, CRISPR, in vitro, Neurodegeneration, Neuroscience, Parkinson's Disease, Stem Cell

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AMSBIO publishes new catalogue that details cutting edge tools for neuroscience research - News-Medical.net

Neuroscape – Bridging the gap between technology and …

Neuroscape: Video Game Research to Improve Mind Quality

Neuroscapeuses a cutting-edge approach to improving brain function building a bridge between neuroscience and consumer friendly technologies.Take a peek inside our centerto see how video games are being developed to support treatment of brain disorders such as ADHD, Autism, Depression, Multiple Sclerosis, Parkinsons and Alzheimers Disease. Neuroscape Research Labs are state-of-the-art research suites designed to study novel neuro-diagnostic and therapeutic approaches, with the primary goal of driving the rapid translation of neuroscience to real-world solutions.

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Neuroscape - Bridging the gap between technology and ...

Search neuroscience | Quizlet

Types of axoplasmic transport, what is

Antegrade

Retrograde (terminal to axon)

Localization of smell receptors

- Antegrade (orthograde)... - Retrograde

Fast: 400mm/day, metabolic imp. subst. , using ATP, done by k

175 mm/day. dynein action, viruses/toxins, endocytosis, trans

- olfactory epithelium 2,5mm2

Types of axoplasmic transport, what is

- Antegrade (orthograde)... - Retrograde

Antegrade

Fast: 400mm/day, metabolic imp. subst. , using ATP, done by k

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Search neuroscience | Quizlet

The Neuroscience Program at The University of Iowa

The University of Iowa has a long tradition as a leading center for study of the nervous system and behavior, and for the training of graduate students in this area. The curriculum is designed to provide a multidisciplinary foundation in the conceptual and methodological approaches to study of the nervous system, emphasizing original, independent student research.

The Neuroscience Program at the University of Iowa offers broad research opportunities with particular strength in areas including:

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The Neuroscience Program at The University of Iowa