March 09, 2013
Flip of a single molecular switch makes an old brain young
From Yale News:
The flip of a single molecular switch helps create the mature neuronal connections that allow the brain to bridge the gap between adolescent impressionability and adult stability. Now Yale School of Medicine researchers have reversed the process, recreating a youthful brain that facilitated both learning and healing in the adult mouse.
Scientists have long known that the young and old brains are very different. Adolescent brains are more malleable or plastic, which allows them to learn languages more quickly than adults and speeds recovery from brain injuries. The comparative rigidity of the adult brain results in part from the function of a single gene that slows the rapid change in synaptic connections between neurons. By monitoring the synapses in living mice over weeks and months, Yale researchers have identified the key genetic switch for brain maturation a study released March 6 in the journal Neuron. The Nogo Receptor 1 gene is required to suppress high levels of plasticity in the adolescent brain and create the relatively quiescent levels of plasticity in adulthood. In mice without this gene, juvenile levels of brain plasticity persist throughout adulthood. When researchers blocked the function of this gene in old mice, they reset the old brain to adolescent levels of plasticity. “These are the molecules the brain needs for the transition from adolescence to adulthood,” said Dr. Stephen Strittmatter. Vincent Coates Professor of Neurology, Professor of Neurobiology and senior author of the paper. “It suggests we can turn back the clock in the adult brain and recover from trauma the way kids recover.”
More here.
Posted by Azra Raza at 08:26 AM | Permalink






















Comments
I am reminded that Jacob Bronowski said that mathematicians do their best work by the time they are 25. I don't think this has changed.
I'll take ten switches, please.
Posted by: Norman Costa | Mar 9, 2013 10:58:48 PM
When you re-post this academic PR posts, how much do yo believe it? Do you know that at best 30% of publihsed biomedical results are reproducible, http://blog.jove.com/2012/05/03/studies-show-only-10-of-published-science-articles-are-reproducible-what-is-happening? Even these results are reproducible, do you really think that cell assay results can be translated into grand claims ,"they reset the old brain to adolescent levels of plasticity" ?
Posted by: Vladimir Morozov | Mar 10, 2013 11:30:42 AM
I'm impressed by all the diseases researchers can cure in mice and rats (generally after first creating them in those animals, of course). I'm also impatiently waiting for some of these tremendous cures to be applied to human beings, but that hardly ever seems to happen.
I realize we are more complex that rodents, but not that more complex, surely. When will they get a move on?
Posted by: JonJ | Mar 10, 2013 2:12:11 PM
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