Scientists know that information travels between brain cells along
hairlike extensions called axons. For the first time, researchers have
found that axons don't just transmit information - they can turn the
signal up or down with the right stimulation.
This finding may help scientists develop treatments for psychiatric
disorders such as depression and schizophrenia in which it is thought
that different parts of the brain do not communicate correctly with
each other.
"Until
now, scientists have thought that in the brain's cortex - where most
cognitive processes occur - information was only processed in the cell
body," said Raju Metherate, author of the study, associate professor of
neurobiology and behavior, and director of the Center for Hearing
Research at UC Irvine. "The result of our study suggests that we must
consider the axons as sites of information processing - and of
potential problems when things go wrong."
This study appears online Aug. 19 in Nature Neuroscience .
Increasingly, studies are beginning to show that complex information
processing, and perhaps consciousness itself, may result from
coordinated activity among many parts of the brain connected by bundles
of long axons. Cognitive problems may occur when these areas don't
communicate properly with each other.
Cognitive function occurs when millions of brain cells communicate with
each other at the same time. A brain cell has a network of branches
called dendrites through which it receives and processes information
from other cells. The body of the cell then relays the processed
information along an axon to a terminal that links to another cell's
dendrites. At the terminal, chemicals called neurotransmitters are
released, allowing the information to enter the receiving cell. Until
now, scientists believed axons were just the wires between point A and
point B.
"Axons, we thought, were like wires in a radio conveying signals, but
we found that if you stimulate the axon, the signal can be altered,
like turning the volume knob on the radio," Metherate said.
Originally, Metherate and his colleagues had hoped to confirm the idea
that the drug nicotine alters information that is processed in the cell
body or terminal. Puzzled by several negative tests, they developed an
experiment in which they could study the intervening axon.
In their experiment, they examined a section of mouse brain associated
with hearing that contained a brain cell with an axon connecting to the
cortex. Using nicotine, they stimulated the axon to determine how it
would affect a signal the brain cell sent to the cortex. Without
applying nicotine, about 35 percent of the messages sent by the brain
cell reached the cortex. But when nicotine was applied to the axon, the
success rate nearly doubled to about 70 percent.
"We looked for more conventional reasons why the response was enhanced,
but the evidence just kept pointing to the axon. Nicotine activated the
proteins that we think are on the axon," Metherate said. "This is a
completely new idea about how the brain works."
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This
story originated from the UC Irvine news office.