2007
DOI: 10.2174/138920107780906496
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Defining Primary and Secondary Progenitor Disorders in the Brain: Proteomic Approaches for Analysis of Neural Progenitor Cells

Abstract: Since the discovery of endogenous progenitor cells in two brain regions in the adult, the notion that progenitor cells might be useful for repairing damaged neurons or replacing dead neurons has gone from fiction to a reality, at least in the laboratory setting. Progenitor cells have the unique ability to be able to produce new neurons in response to endogenous and exogenous cues from their microenvironment in the brain and from the environment of the organism. However, in models of several disorders and insul… Show more

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References 112 publications
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