Friday, May 15, 2026
ADVT 
Health

Scientists Replicate Folding Human Brain In 3D In Lab

IANS, 02 Feb, 2016 12:05 PM
    Researchers at the Harvard University including an Indian-origin scientist have replicated a folding human brain in 3D, revealing for the first time a simple mechanical framework for how it folds.
     
    Understanding how the brain folds could help unlock its inner workings and unravel brain-related disorders as function often follows form.
     
    It shows that while many molecular processes are important in determining cellular events, what ultimately causes the brain to fold is a simple mechanical instability associated with buckling.
     
    Highly folded brains are seen only in a handful of species including some primates, dolphins, elephants and pigs.
     
    In humans, folding begins in fetal brains around the 20th week of gestation and is completed only when the child is about a year and a half.
     
    “We found that we could mimic cortical folding using a very simple physical principle and get results qualitatively similar to what we see in real fetal brains," said L. Mahadevan, professor of applied mathematics, organismic and evolutionary biology and physics from Harvard John A. Paulson School of Engineering and Applied Sciences.
     
    The number, size, shape and position of neuronal cells during brain growth all lead to the expansion of the gray matter, known as the cortex, relative to the underlying white matter.
     
    This puts the cortex under compression, leading to a mechanical instability that causes it to crease locally, said the team that included scientists from Finland and France.
     
    “This simple evolutionary innovation allows for a large cortex to be packed into a small volume and is likely the dominant cause behind brain folding, known as gyrification," added Mahadevan in a paper published in the journal Nature Physics.
     
    The team made a 3D, gel model of a smooth fetal brain based on MRI images.
     
    To mimic cortical expansion, the gel brain was immersed in a solvent that is absorbed by the outer layer causing it to swell relative to the deeper regions.
     
    Within minutes of being immersed in liquid solvent, the resulting compression led to the formation of folds similar in size and shape to real brains.
     
    The key to those similarities lies in the unique shape of the human brain.
     
    The research shows that if a part of the brain does not grow properly, or if the global geometry is disrupted, we may not have the major folds in the right place, which may cause dysfunction in the brain, the authors noted.

    MORE Health ARTICLES

    Second-hand Smoke Leads To Obesity

    Second-hand Smoke Leads To Obesity
    Debunking a long-held popular belief that smoking cigarettes helps keep one slim, researchers have now found that even second hand exposure to cigarette smoke can cause weight gain.

    Second-hand Smoke Leads To Obesity

    Copper could help prevent Ebola spread

    Copper could help prevent Ebola spread
    Replacing frequently-touched surfaces, such as door handles, taps and light switches, with solid copper or copper alloy equivalents could be an...

    Copper could help prevent Ebola spread

    Inhaled Ebola vaccine could offer long-term protection

    Inhaled Ebola vaccine could offer long-term protection
    A single dose of a breathable, respiratory vaccine could provide long-term protection against the deadly Ebola virus, new research shows....

    Inhaled Ebola vaccine could offer long-term protection

    Sugar-rich fat maintains supply of brain stem cells

    Sugar-rich fat maintains supply of brain stem cells
    Fat and sugar are considered to be the culprits when it comes to obesity and related health complications but if researchers are to be believed...

    Sugar-rich fat maintains supply of brain stem cells

    Defective nerve insulation triggers migraine

    Defective nerve insulation triggers migraine
    The unbearable headache that migraine patients suffer is due to cellular-level changes in nerve structure, says a study....

    Defective nerve insulation triggers migraine

    Mild BP control adequate for people above 60

    Mild BP control adequate for people above 60
    Even a mild dose of drugs used to treat high blood pressure would be adequate for the elderly population who suffer from the condition, a study says....

    Mild BP control adequate for people above 60