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Resolution: standard / high Figure 2.
The key points of the hypothesis. The developing human brain (12-15 weeks' gestation) exhibit 30-35% of aneuploid
cells [28], which are formed during neurogenesis (prenatal brain development). This process
becomes exhausted soon after birth. At later developmental stage, adult neurogenesis
starts, being, however, significantly less productive in terms of the amount of cells
formed. Abnormal clearance of aneuploid cells leads to postnatal brain diseases, which
are featured by GIN and CIN confined to the brain. Some of these diseases are associated
with accelerated aging (i.e. Alzheimer's disease and ataxia-telangiectasia). Normal
brain development leads to decrease of aneuploidy rates, which achieves averagely
10% [9,10,14]. The presence of aneuploid cells in the brain from the early prenatal development
to the late ontogeny is hypothesized to give rise to GIN and CIN in the brain of elderly
individuals. This is partially confirmed by analyzing controls in molecular neurocytogenetic
studies of the diseased brain [5,7,12-14,16-20]. Mitotic errors during adult neurogenesis can also produce aneuploid cells throughout
aging.
Yurov et al. Molecular Cytogenetics 2009 2:23 doi:10.1186/1755-8166-2-23 |