A
team of researchers has discovered how the Zika virus stunts head and brain
development, thanks to the sophisticated "mini-brains." Studying a new type of pinhead-size, lab-grown brain made with technology first
suggested by three high school students, Johns Hopkins researchers have
confirmed a key way in which Zika virus causes microcephaly and other damage in
fetal brains: by infecting specialized stem cells that build its outer layer,
the cortex, ANI reports.
At a later stage, mimicking the second trimester, Zika still preferentially infected neural progenitor cells, but it also affected some neurons. Growth was slower, and the cortex was thinner than in noninfected brains."These different effects correspond to what clinicians have seen in infants born to women who contracted Zika during pregnancy, as well as miscarriages, she notes, namely that the earlier in pregnancy Zika infection occurs, the more severe its effects. The research group's next step will be to test drugs already FDA-approved for other conditions on the mini-brains to see whether one might provide some protection against Zika
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