Tiny human brain grown in lab has eye-like structures that 'see' light
Small blobs of human brain grown in a dish have been coaxed into forming rudimentary eyes that respond to light. They could help understand eye disease or grow artificial retinas

By Clare Wilson
A encephalon organoid with eye-like optic cups Elke Gabriel
Small blobs of quality encephalon grown successful a crockery person been coaxed into forming rudimentary eyes, which respond to airy by sending signals to the remainder of the encephalon tissue.
The pairs of eye-like structures make tissues akin to those successful existent eyes, including a circular lens, which usually focuses an image, and a retina, the spot of insubstantial astatine the backmost of the oculus that senses light. In a way, the encephalon insubstantial is “seeing” light, says Jay Gopalakrishnan astatine Heinrich Heine …
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