New digital atlas reveals hidden
For more than 100 years, scientists have studied the human brain by collecting small pieces of information, similar to early explorers creating maps of unknown regions. However, a complete understanding of the brain remains a major challenge because it contains around 86 billion neurons.
Doctors and researchers still examine only limited tissue samples when studying complex conditions like Alzheimer’s disease. Many parts of the brain remain unexplored because traditional methods cannot show the complete picture at a cellular level.
Scientists at the Sudha Gopalakrishnan Brain Centre (SGBC) at the Indian Institute of Technology Madras (IIT Madras) have developed a major breakthrough in brain research. They created what they describe as the most detailed three-dimensional atlas of the human brainstem with cellular-level information.
Anchor atlas connects MRI scans
The new digital map, called Anchor (Atlas of Neurochemical Characterisation of the Human Brainstem with 3D Reconstruction), combines more than 500 brain tissue sections from foetal, childhood, and adult brains.
Researchers created the atlas using high-resolution microscope images. The system provides a detailed 3D view of the brainstem and identifies more than 200 groups of brain cells and important nerve pathways.
The atlas uses eight chemical markers to separate different types of brain cells. This approach helps scientists understand the structure and function of one of the most important but least studied areas of the brain.
Brainstem plays a vital role
Although the brainstem is only a small part of the brain, it controls essential body functions. It connects the brain with the spinal cord and manages breathing, heartbeat, sleep cycles, alertness, and movement.
Small injuries or changes in specific brainstem cell groups can cause serious health problems. Scientists have struggled to study this area because its tightly packed structure makes detailed mapping difficult.
A new bridge between medical imaging
The importance of Anchor goes beyond creating another brain map. It connects two areas of neuroscience that have traditionally worked separately.
MRI scans show the overall structure of the brain but cannot reveal individual cells. Microscopes show detailed cellular information but only from small tissue sections.
This new atlas allows researchers to move from a complete brain scan to individual nerve cells, creating a clearer understanding of brain disorders and diseases.
Neuroscientists say the project represents a significant achievement by combining engineering, medicine, and brain science. Researchers believe this technology can support future studies of neurological conditions and improve understanding of the human brain.
Changing the way scientists
Currently, neuropathologists examine the whole brain before studying small tissue samples under a microscope. An adult human brain usually weighs between 1.2 and 1.5 kilograms, and doctors first analyze its overall structure for possible signs of disease.
In conditions like Alzheimer’s disease, researchers often study only a small number of tissue sections compared with the entire brain. The new 3D brainstem atlas provides a wider view and may help scientists discover new patterns linked to brain disorders.
For decades, researchers have relied on methods developed after the early work of Spanish neuroscientist Santiago Ramón y Cajal. Modern technology now offers a new opportunity to combine large-scale brain imaging with detailed cellular research.
The Anchor project marks an important step toward creating more complete digital maps of the human brain and improving future neuroscience research.
