A Groundbreaking Brain Map Could Revolutionize Parkinson’s Treatment
The BrainSTEM map analyzes nearly 680,000 fetal brain cells, improving midbrain neuron models to aid Parkinson's therapies, with Parkinson's affecting 3 in 1,000 over age 50.
2 Articles
2 Articles
Detailed map of the developing human brain opens new pathways for Parkinson's treatment
Scientists from Duke-NUS Medical School and their collaborators have created one of the most comprehensive single cell maps of the developing human brain. The atlas captures nearly every cell type, their genetic fingerprints, and how they grow and interact. It also benchmarks best-in-class laboratory methods for producing high-quality neurons, marking a major step toward new therapies for Parkinson's disease and other brain disorders.
A groundbreaking brain map could revolutionize Parkinson’s treatment
Duke-NUS scientists unveiled BrainSTEM, a revolutionary single-cell map that captures the full cellular diversity of the developing human brain. The project’s focus on dopamine neurons provides crucial insight for Parkinson’s treatment. Their findings reveal flaws in current lab-grown models while offering a precise, open-source standard for future research. It’s a leap toward more accurate brain modeling and powerful cell-based therapies.
Coverage Details
Bias Distribution
- 100% of the sources are Center
 
Factuality
To view factuality data please Upgrade to Premium

