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| Layer 5 pyramidal neurons in normal mice (left) compared with mice with autism gene knocked-out (right), showing a patch of disorganized cortex. Microscopic Image Credit: IOB |
Researchers have identified a new brain circuit in mouse embryos that develops at an unexpectedly early stage. Their findings may provide new insights into circuit abnormalities in autism.
A research team led by Professor Botond Roska at the Institute of Molecular and Clinical Ophthalmology Basel (IOB) and the University of Basel has studied circuits in the brains of living mouse embryos. They discovered a previously unknown, early active circuit in the cerebral cortex. Genetic disruption of this circuit leads to changes similar to those seen in brains of people with autism. The team reports these findings in the scientific journal "Cell".
Autism has long been associated with faulty circuits in the cortex, which is the part of the brain that governs sensory perception, cognition, and other high-order functions. Most of the cortex is composed of excitatory cells called pyramidal neurons. The research team studied when and how these neurons assemble into the first active circuits in the cortex.
“Understanding the detailed development of cell types and circuits in the cortex can provide important insights into autism and other neurodevelopmental diseases,” says Botond Roska, Director at IOB and professor at the Faculty of Medicine, University of Basel.




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