A biotech company, Tensor Biosciences of Irvine, California, has developed a method to keep pieces of living brain tissue alive for weeks, which will allow research on entire neural networks rather individual cells.
"We are building stripped-down mini-brains, if you will, directly on a chip," says Miro Pastrnak, business development director of Tensor.
"Behaviour is the result of the electrical activity of billions of brain cells connected in complex circuits, not the activity of a cell or a receptor acting in isolation," says Pastrnak. Currently, drugs are only tested on individual nerve cells because larger pieces of brain tissue couldn't be kept alive for more than a few hours.