Why don’t neurons divide?

by time news

As if I hear you say: What is my relationship? Hear from me:
Our speech, movement, sleep, and everything in our body is driven by nerves. If you get lost, how do you compensate?
Our nervous system is divided into two parts: central and peripheral. The central is the brain and spinal cord and the other is the rest of the body’s nerves.
The brain is still perplexed; For decades, scientists believed that it could produce nerve tissue. But a 2018 study blew up their hypotheses. They counted 59 samples of human brains from fetuses and adults at the age of 77, at the latest. The brain produces tissue until the age of one year after birth, and then stops. Despite these results, researchers are still skeptical and think that the brain produces tissue even later.
Neurons are somatic cells, meaning that if they divide, their division will be equal and not equitable like sex cells. This division requires something in the cell called the centriole that copies the chromosomes. This centriole is not present in neurons.
They succeeded in regenerating the skin, to fight aging, but neurons are still a big bump on the human search for immortality.

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