oligodendrocyte
EDIT: Well technically not the mature oligos, only the immature ones. No adult glial cell has been observed to undergo mitosis, I don't think.
oligodendrocyte
EDIT: Well technically not the mature oligos, only the immature ones. No adult glial cell has been observed to undergo mitosis, I don't think.
that is incorrect. the poster above me has it right. its schwan cells and neurons in the PNS. its likely due to the presence of a neurolemma in schwann cells, which oligodencrocytes do not have.
Yeah that's what I thought too...There is a new class of cells "Neural Stem Cells" (NSCs) which have the same precursor as oligodendrocytes That's why I thought the oligodendrocyte was probably right...Not sure if this is right, but I always thought neurolemma is for the regen of damaged neurons not for the creation of new ones.
http://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pubmed/17697047
http://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pubmed/16111552
Yeah that's what I thought too...There is a new class of cells "Neural Stem Cells" (NSCs) which have the same precursor as oligodendrocytes That's why I thought the oligodendrocyte was probably right...
I think the glial cells you're looking for are astrocytes (in the subventricular and the subgranular zones of the olfactory bulbs and hippocampus, respectively).
Here's one of several.
http://www.jneurosci.org/cgi/content/abstract/27/32/8654