If these mutations
happen during embryonic development, there could be several neurological problems: the child could become autistic, kids could be born with seizure disorder, or the developing neurons might not migrate to their proper site in the brain.
Not exact matches
«This burst of genetic changes
happens only
during the early stages of
embryonic development and then it stops,» Liu said.
This
happens particularly often
during the stage of
embryonic development, but it can also occur in tumors when they form metastases.
This migration may
happen because the repair pathways initiated by the damaged cells are similar to pathways triggered
during embryonic development, where stem cells are key, explains ReNeuron co-founder and chief scientific officer John Sinden.