Friday, October 5, 2012

Molecular Control of Neurogenesis: A View from the Mammalian Cerebral Cortex

I can't wait until I have complete access to scientific research, it would make it much simpler to convince the stroke medical world that absolutely everything in it can be vastly improved. Get your doctor to read this and create a stroke protocol for you.
http://cshperspectives.cshlp.org/content/4/10/a008359.abstract

Abstract

The mammalian nervous system is the most complex organ of any living organism. How this complexity is generated during neural development is just beginning to be elucidated. This article discusses the signaling, transcriptional, and epigenetic mechanisms that are involved in neural development. The first part focuses on molecules that control neuronal numbers through regulation of the timing of onset of neurogenesis, the timing of the neuronal-to-glial switch, and the rate of progenitor proliferation. The second part focuses on molecules that control neuronal diversity by generating spatially or temporally distinct populations of neuronal progenitors. Most of the studies discussed in this article are focused on the developing mammalian cerebral cortex, because this is one of the main model systems for neural developmental studies and many of the mechanisms identified in this tissue also operate elsewhere in the developing brain and spinal cord.

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