BBC: 'Atlas of cells transforms understanding of human body' (20 Nov 2024)

Sasha

Senior Member (Voting Rights)
Wonder if this Human Cell Atlas could help us, given that it's mapping unknown stuff...

James Gallagher said:
An ambitious plan to map all 37 trillion cells in the human body is transforming understanding of how our bodies work, scientists report.

The received wisdom said we were built from around 200 types of cell – such as heart muscle or nerve cells.

Instead the Human Cell Atlas project has revealed there are thousands of cell types, with some appearing to be culprits in diseases such as inflammatory bowel disease and cystic fibrosis.

In a flurry of announcements, the formation of the human skeleton and the early immune system have also been mapped out in detail.

The novel insight is akin to moving from the maps of the 15th Century era of Joan of Arc and Richard III to what the phone in your pocket can load....

https://www.bbc.co.uk/news/articles/c23829l8kzro
 
Wonder if this Human Cell Atlas could help us, given that it's mapping unknown stuff...

This is marketing rather than science, @Sasha. Any grown up scientist has known since student days that 'cell types' are just convenient rough groupings. Every cell is different in one way or another. Every brain cell has a different structure and function. People write this sort of stuff to sound clever and get awarded money for their research by others who play the same game. `we learn more gradually but there is no sudden new knowledge created by naming a new 'Project'.
 
An analogy might be making an atlas of all cities and claiming that it would lead to a new understanding of human society. Without all the details about who is in each city and all their interactions, there won't be any new understanding of society. The complexity of the interior of cells and all their interior interactions and exterior interactions probably rival the complexity of a city.
 
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