
NEURAL NETWORKINGBy watching nerve cells in the brain, a team monitors changes in the connections between nerve cells from the brain stem (stained yellow in image) of a living mouse and nerve cells near the salivary gland (stained blue). If one cell drops communication, the connection eventually breaks. C.M. McCann and J.W. Lichtman
For a nerve
cell, it’s all about making connections and dropping the duds. Harvard
neuroscientist Jeff Lichtman has been keeping an eye on nerve networking by observing
how one neuron reacts when another grows silent. In a phone interview, he
described the situation by analogy: “It’s like if I’m talking to you and you
stop talking back to me. After a while I’ll hang up and walk away.”
Nerve cells
grown in petri dishes are known to act this way — abandoning cells that ignore
the chemical messages they send.
But now Lichtman
and his colleagues, reporting online June 22 in Nature Neuroscience, document the phenomenon in a living animal,
using a technique that allowed them to watch cells grow and change in real
time.
The team
shows how nerve cells from the brain stem (stained yellow in image) of a living
mouse make connections with nerve cells (stained blue) near the salivary gland.
When the
team injured the blue-stained cells, rendering them mute, the yellow-stained
neurons first stopped sending chemical signals and, over time, pulled back. “Literally,”
Lichtman says, “we watched connections get weak and disappear.”
Throughout
life, connections are made and subsequently lost. Pruning unnecessary
connections is an essential part of precise wiring, Lichtman says.
Doctors test
the “wiring” in their patients’ nervous systems by tapping knees, expecting the
strike to signal the brain and the brain to wire back down a “kick” response to
the leg. In this study, the team examined salivary connections — the type
that make animals drool at the scent of something scrumptious. They weren’t
interested in salivation per se, but rather in understanding how neural
connections are molded as an animal grows and experiences life. This malleable
process, called synaptic plasticity (synapses are the places where two nerve
cells meet), occurs throughout the brain. For example, in the hippocampus, memories
form as connections are strengthened and may be lost when connections diminish.
“This is a
terrific study because they watched real things in a real animal, in real
time,” comments Darwin Berg, a neuroscientist at the University
of California, San Diego. “These mechanisms are almost
certainly employed in other systems such as learning and memory.”
Found in: Body & Brain and Genes & Cells