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FEATURES
Nerve Cell Navigation

  By R. John Davenport

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For a human embryo, fashioning a nervous system is a daunting challenge. It must direct a tube of cells to morph into the brain and spinal cord and form the one hundred billion neurons, or nerve cells, that twist and turn through the body to link the brain to every limb and organ.

Each neuron sends a long cable—an axon—to branch toward its destination, connecting to as many as a thousand other cells along the way. These branches enable every muscle, organ, gland, and bit of skin to transmit control signals. Spindly arms at the opposite end of the neuron, called dendrites, receive information from other neurons.

Illustration: Jon Han

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