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Brain cell communication
FORGET GIGABYTES. Even the most powerful computers available
today are mere playthings compared to the complexity, efficiency,
and information processing capacity of the human brain.
Underlying the brain's far superior design are the billion-
million or so connections between brain cells-called synapses-
that form vast neural networks in which brain cells, or neurons,
are each connected to thousands of other neurons.
These networks-and their ability to be shaped by experience-
enable us to receive, process, store, and retrieve all manner of
information about our world. Unfortunately, the extremely tiny
size of synapses and the limitations of conventional experimental
techniques have hampered detailed studies of these essential
structures. (One trillion synaptic compartments, or "dendritic
spines," could fit into a thimble).
Now, scientists at Cold Spring Harbor Laboratory have overcome
these technical obstacles to gain an extremely close look at the
properties of dendritic spines and synapses that govern brain
function.
"Our findings reveal fundamental properties of synapses that
enables them to trigger the changes in neurons that underlie
learning and memory," says Karel Svoboda, the principal author of
the study published in Nature.
Svoboda, an investigator of the Howard Hughes Medical Institute
at Cold Spring Harbor Laboratory, helped pioneer the use of a
high resolution imaging technique called "two-photon microscopy"
in neuroscience.
In the current study, Svoboda and his colleague Bernardo Sabatini
electrically stimulated brain neurons and used two-photon
microscopy to watch as calcium rushed-in to single dendritic
spines of these neurons .
These measurements enabled the researchers to determine the
number and type of "calcium channels" present at synapses in a
region of the brain important for learning and memory, the
hippocampus.
Calcium channels are molecular gates that open in response to
electrical stimulation and allow calcium to flow into dendritic
spines. Calcium, in turn, triggers biochemical events in the
spine which modify synaptic strength and thereby encode memories.
In their study, Sabatini and Svoboda could detect if single
calcium channels opened or, by chance, remained closed following
stimulation.
Measuring the probability of channel opening, "like tossing a
coin, where heads is open and tails is closed," says Svoboda,
enabled him and Sabatini to determine the number of calcium
channels per spine.
The scientists discovered that depending on their size, spines
contain from one to twenty, and typically three, calcium
channels.
But nothing is that simple in the brain. Which type of channel is
causing these changes in calcium?
There are at least six known varieties of calcium channels that
could be present in spines, each having different properties.
Using chemical probes, Sabatini and Svoboda were able to
demonstrate that one specific type of channel (the R type) is
solely responsible for the influx of calcium that they observed.
"The local influx of calcium we have observed in spines is a
fundamental measure of the information carried in one particular
brain neuron and how it is processed locally.
The information encoded in the messages passed between neurons is
simple," says Sabatini. "It's not unlike computer programming
code where a single command can be either one for a positive
response or zero for a negative response." When an action
potential causes a calcium channel to open, that's a one, when it
fails to open that's a zero.
Scientists believe that the strengthening of synapses between
neurons in response to experience ultimately gives rise to
networks of neurons that govern complex brain functions like
learning and memory.
Moreover, communication within these networks forms the basis of
thinking and self-awareness that we call cognition.
Visualizing how neurons communicate with each other on the most
basic level, as Sabatini and Svoboda have done, provides
important clues for understanding how our brains outperform the
most sophisticated computers and enable us to grasp the human
experience.
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