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Isolation of postnatal human neural stem cells

TL;DR

While it was once thought that neurogenesis is complete by birth, it is now apparent that the human brain continues to generate new neurons postnatally, at least into childhood. While much attention has been focused on postnatally-born neurons, their presumed progenitor -- the postnatal neural stem cell (NSC) -- remains poorly characterized. Using index sorting, we identify and prospectively isolate two subsets of NSCs from the postnatal human brain, and describe their differentiation dynamics u

Credibility Assessment Preliminary — 34/100
Study Design
Rigor of the research methodology
5/20
Sample Size
Whether the study was sufficiently powered
7/20
Peer Review
Review status and journal reputation
4/20
Replication
Has this finding been independently reproduced?
6/20
Transparency
Funding disclosure and data availability
12/20
Overall
Sum of all five dimensions
34/100

While it was once thought that neurogenesis is complete by birth, it is now apparent that the human brain continues to generate new neurons postnatally, at least into childhood. While much attention has been focused on postnatally-born neurons, their presumed progenitor -- the postnatal neural stem cell (NSC) -- remains poorly characterized. Using index sorting, we identify and prospectively isolate two subsets of NSCs from the postnatal human brain, and describe their differentiation dynamics using clonal barcoding and in vivo xenotransplantation. We demonstrate an A2B5+EGFR+ population biased towards interneuron and oligodendrocyte fates (NINO), and an A2B5-EGFRhi population biased towards an astrocyte fate (NAC). Profiling of human brains across lifespan shows that the frequency of NSCs declined exponentially across the first two decades of life, but stabilized thereafter, still present in the brains of donors as old as 90 years. Our study provides a framework for the functional study of postnatal human NSCs and their potential roles in development, aging, and disease.

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