Radiolab

Brain Balls

244 snips
Jan 9, 2026
Madeline Lancaster, a pioneering neuroscientist, accidentally discovered cerebral organoids while using expired lab materials. These miniature brain models reveal how human brains develop and are now used in cancer treatment and even play video games like Pong. The discussion dives into ethical concerns about their potential consciousness and the implications of connecting organoids to study pain pathways. Lancaster's groundbreaking work opens up new avenues for understanding human development and diseases, sparking both fascination and debate.
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INSIGHT

Bespoke Tumor Testing With Organoids

  • Howard Fine uses patient-derived organoids to grow glioblastoma on matching mini-brains and screen many drugs.
  • This personalized testing can reveal effective treatments faster than animal models.
INSIGHT

Assembloids Recreate Body Circuits

  • Scientists make organoids of many body parts and assemble them into 'assembloids' that communicate.
  • Connecting sensory, spinal, thalamic, and cortical organoids recreates signal pathways previously hidden inside bodies.
ANECDOTE

Pain Pathway Traced In An Assembloid

  • Sergio Pasca's team connected sensory, spinal, thalamus, and cortex organoids and applied capsaicin to trigger signal waves through the assembloid.
  • They observed synchronized firing and traced pain pathways inside the dish.
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