Human Neuron Differentiation Core
The Translational Neuroscience Center at Boston Children’s Hospital has established a Human Neuron Differentiation Core to help researchers better understand neurological disorders and hopefully lead to earlier diagnosis and better treatment for neurological disorders. The purpose of this study is to create cell lines from bio-samples from patients with specific neurological disorders to look for the cause of the disorder, and to develop new diagnostic tests and treatments for the disorder. We hope that with the knowledge gained from research done through this core, we might be able to help the participants in this core in the future. We are collecting samples from patients with mutations in CDKL5, PTEN, or SHANK3, as well as patients diagnosed with tuberous sclerosis complex, Rett syndrome, and other genetic disorders.
If you would like to learn more about participating in this study, please contact our Research Study Coordinator at 617-919-2773 or NeuroCore@childrens.harvard.edu.
EEG studies: Visual evoked potentials
Michela Fagiolini, PhD, of the F. M. Kirby Neurobiology Center at Boston Children’s uses mouse models to study experience-dependent brain development, with a focus on Rett syndrome, CDKL5, and other neurodevelopmental disorders. She has also been using specialized brain EEG recordings known as visual evoked potentials to measure visual processing in children with Rett syndrome, and believes the results can help monitor the disease and the effects of therapy. She plans similar studies in children with CDKL5 mutations, in collaboration with the laboratory of Charles A. Nelson, PhD.