Kind: captions Language: en [Music] do you think you can maybe talk through the first few months and then on to the first 20 years and then for the rest of their lives what is the development of the human brain look like what are the different stages yeah at the beginning you have to build a brain right and the brain is made of cells what's the very beginning which beginning I were talking in the embryo as the embryo is developing in the womb in addition to making all of the other tissues of the embryo the muscle the heart the blood the embryo is also building the brain and it builds from a very simple structure called the neural tube which is basically nothing but a tube of cells that spans sort of the length of the embryo from the head all the way to the tail let's say of the embryo and then over in human beings over many months of gestation from that neural tube which contains stem cell-like cells of the brain you will make many many other building blocks of the brain so all of the other cell types there are many many different types of cells in the brain that will form specific structures of the brain so you can think about embryonic development of the brain is just the time in which you are making the building blocks the cells at the stem cells relatively homogeneous like uniform or they all different okay good question it's exactly how it works you start with a more homogeneous perhaps more multipotent type of stem cell that multi important it means that it can it has the potential to make many many different types of other cells and then with time these progenitors become more heterogeneous which means more diverse there are going to be many different types of the stem cells and also they will give rise to progeny to other cells that are not stem cells that are specific cells of the brain that are very different from the mothers themselves and now you think about this process of making cells from the stem cells over many many months of development for humans and what you're doing you're building the cells they physically make the brain and then you arrange them in specific structures that are present in the final brain so you can think about the embryonic development of the brain as the time where you're building the bricks you're putting the bricks together to form buildings structures regions of the brain and where you make the connections between these many different type of cells especially nerve cells neurons right that transmit action potentials and electricity I've heard you also says somewhere I think correct me if I'm wrong that the order of the way this builds matters oh yes if you are an engineer and you think think about development you can think of it as well I could also take all the cells and bring them all together into a brain in the end but development is much more than that so the cells are made in a very specific order that subserve the final product that you need to get in so for example all of the nerve cells the neurons are made first in all of the supportive cells of the neurons like the glia is made later and there is a reason for that because they have to assemble together in specific ways but you also may say well why don't we just put them all together in the end it's because as they develop next to each other they influence their own development so it's a different thing for a glia to be made alone in a dish then a glia be made in a glia style be made in a developing embryo with all these other cells around it that produce all these other signals first of all that's mind-blowing that this development process from my perspective in artificial intelligence you often think of how incredible the final product is the final product the brain but you just you're making me realize that the final product is just is the the beautiful thing is the actual development and development process do we know the code that drives that the development yeah do we have any sense first of all thank you for saying that it's really the formation of the brain it's really it's development this incredibly choreograph dance that happens the same way every time each one of us builds the brain right and that builds an organ that allows us to do what we're doing today right yeah that is mind blowing and this is why developmental neurobiologists never get tired in that now you're asking about the code what drives this how is this done well it's you know millions of years of evolution of really fine-tuning gene expression programs that allow certain cells to be made at a certain time and to be in to become a certain you know cell type but also mechanical forces of pressure bending this embryo is not just it will not stay a tube this this brain for very long at some point is tube in the front of the of the embryo will expand to make the primordium of the brain right now they the forces that control that these cells feel and this is another beautiful thing at the very force that they feel which is different from a week before a week ago will tell the cell oh you're being squished in a certain way begin to produce these new genes because now you are at the corner or you are you know in a stretch of cells or whatever it is and there so that mechanical physical force shapes the fate of the cell as well so nala chemical is also McCann mechanical so from my perspective biology is this incredibly complex mess gooey mess so you're seeing mechanical forces how different is a like a computer or any kind of mechanical machine that we humans build and the biological systems have you been because you've worked a lot with biological systems are they as much of a mess as it seems from our perspective of an engineer mechanical engineer yeah they are much more prone to taking alternative routes right so if you we go back to printing a brain versus developing a brain of course if you print a brain given that you start with the same building blocks the same cells you could potentially print it the same way every time but that final brain may not work the same way as a brain built during development does because the build very build very same building blocks that you're using developed in a completely different environment right there was not the environment of the brain therefore they're going to be different just by definition so if you instead use development to be able to say a brain organ order which maybe we'll be talking about and if you're sure things are fascinating yes so if you if you use processes of of development then you when you watch it you can see that sometime things can go wrong in some organ weights and by wrong I mean different one organ way from the next well if you think about that embryo it always goes right so it's this development it's for as complexity as it is every time a baby is born has you know with very few exceptions so the brain is like the next baby but it's not the same if you develop it in a dish and first of all is we don't even develop a brain you develop something much simpler in the dish but there are more options for building things differently which really tells you the evolution as has played a really tight game here for how in the end the brain is built in vivo so just a quick may be dumb question but it seems like this is not the building process is not a dictatorship it seems like there's not a centralized like high-level mechanism that says ok this cell built itself the wrong way I'm going to kill it it seems like it's there's a really strong mechanism is that is that in your sense for there are a lot of there are a lot of possibilities right and if you think about for example different species building their brain each brain is a little bit different so the brain of a lizard is very different from that of a chicken from that of a you know one of us and so on and so forth and still is a brain but it was built differently if starting from stem cells that pretty much had the same potential but in the end evolution builds different brains in different species because that serves in a way the purpose of the species and the well-being of that organism and so there are many possibilities but then there is a way and you were talking about a code nobody knows what the entire code of development is of course we don't we know bits and bits and pieces of very specific aspects of development of the brain what genes are involved to make a certain cell types out those two cells interact to make the next level structure that we might know but the entirety of it oh it's so well control it's really mind-blowing so in the first two months in the embryo or whatever the first few weeks so yeah the the building blocks are constructed the actual the the different regions of the brain I guess in the the nervous system well this continuous way longer than just the first few months so over the the very first in a few months you build a lot of these cells but then there is continuous building of new cell types all the way through birth and then even post Natalie you know I don't know if you ever heard of myelin myelin is this sort of insulation that is build around the cables of the neurons so that the electricity can go really fast the front axons I guess the accidents are called axons exactly and and so as human beings we myelinate ourselves post Natalie a kid in a six-year-old kid has barely started the process of making the mature oligodendrocytes which are the cells then eventually we'll wrap the accents into myelin and this will continue believe it or not until we are about you know 2530 years old so there is a continuous process of maturation and tweaking and additions and and also in response to what we do you