Off-topic, but too weird NOT to share...
WASHINGTON – Adding an extra version of a single gene makes mice grow big brains – brains so large they have to fold up, much as human brains do, to fit inside the skull, researchers said yesterday.
It is not yet clear whether the mice are smarter – they were all killed soon after birth – but the scientists said they were surprised that one gene had such a strong effect and said they would do further experiments.
"I know the most interesting question was whether they learned to play Mozart, but we don't know," said study leader Dr. Christopher Walsh of Beth Israel Deaconess Hospital and Harvard Medical School in Boston.
"A bigger brain is not always good," he added, pointing out that a condition called megacephaly, in which the cerebral cortex grows too large, can cause mental retardation.
Walsh and colleague Anjen Chenn started with a protein called beta-catenin, which helps control cell division.
"It is expressed in the brain in such a w ay that made us think it could be a regulatory switch that makes cells stop dividing . . . and become a neuron,"
Walsh said. "Because neurons don't divide, that has to happen for a cell to become a neuron."
Unlike cells in other tissues of the body, neurons stop dividing and become fully formed before birth.
So Walsh and Chenn genetically engineered mice, adding extra beta-catenin that would become overactive specifically in brain tissue.
To their surprise, they report in yesterday's issue of the journal Science, the mice developed large, folded brains that looked like human brains.
"We didn't expect to see the folds. We sort of expected the cerebral cortex would be big. We didn't expect it to be so big," Walsh said.
Mouse brains normally have a smooth surface. Human brains are all wrinkled and folded, because they are squashed into the skull.
Humans have disproportionately large brains for their size. Especially large is the cerebral cortex, the surface layer made up of gray matter – the stuff involved in thought, as opposed to control of basic body functions.
"The thinking power of the cerebral cortex is determined by surface area. It is basically a sheet," said Walsh, a neurologist and geneticist.
"If unfolded, it would be 10 times bigger than our head is. But the head has to be small enough to come out of the mother's body at the right time."
So in humans, it is stuffed in there, all folded up. As it was in the genetically engineered mice.
Walsh's team will genetically engineer more mice and let them develop, to see whether they become more intelligent than normal.
-- Barb Chaplain, ARSCC http://members.cox.net/bwarr1/index.htm
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