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Complete the form below and we will email you a PDF version of "How Axolotls Regrow Their Brains After Injury"

In a new study published in Science, researchers have used single-​nucleus sequencing (sNuc-Seq) to characterize the cell populations of the axolotl forebrain, an aquatic salamander that can regenerate brain tissue post-injury.

Axolotls – a translational model

The brain is a complex organ, comprising billions of cells and neuronal connections that form intricate networks. Understanding which cells are actively engaged in neurological processes – and which genes underpin this activity – can help us to decipher this complexity. It is only recently that advances in single-cell sequencing have made such research possible, providing insights on the molecular signatures of thousands of individual cells.

sNuc-Seq is a type of single-cell sequencing method that focuses on isolated nuclei, rather than whole cells, to explore which genes are effectively “turned on” or “turned off”. Researchers from the Quantitative Developmental Biology lab at ETH Zurich – led by Professor Barbara Treutlein – in collaboration with researchers from Professor Elly Tanaka’s lab at the Institute of Molecular Pathology in Vienna have used sNuc-Seq to characterize the neuronal cell populations found in the axolotl forebrain.