January 8, 2004
Scientists
Discover New Gene Essential For The Development
Of Normal Brain Connections Resulting From Sensory Input
By Sherry Seethaler
Biologists at the University of California, San Diego and the Johns Hopkins
University have discovered a gene that plays a key role in initiating
changes in the brain in response to sensory experience, a finding that may
provide insight into certain types of learning disorders.
After birth, learning
and experience change the architecture of the brain dramatically. The
structure of individual neurons, or nerve cells, changes during learning to
accommodate new connections between neurons. Neuroscientists believe these
structural changes are initiated when neurons are activated, causing
calcium ions to flow into cells and alter the activity of genes.
In a paper featured on
the cover of the January 9th issue of the journal Science,
biologists at UCSD and the Johns Hopkins University medical school report
the discovery of the first gene, CREST, known to mediate these changes in
the structure of neurons in response to calcium.
“We discovered the gene
CREST using a new method we developed to identify genes that are switched
on in the presence of calcium,” says Anirvan Ghosh, a professor of biology
at UCSD who headed the study. “The brains of mice lacking CREST appear
normal at birth, but do not develop normally in response to sensory
experience after birth. This parallels some learning disorders in humans
where the child appears normal initially, but by the age of two or three
years it becomes clear that there are failures in the acquisition of new
knowledge.”
|
Images
of neurons from normal mice (left) and from mice lacking CREST gene
(right) Credit: Anirvan Ghosh
|
Neurons from normal
mice develop a highly branched tree-like structure. In fact, much of the
growth of the brain that occurs soon after birth is the development and
branching of dendrites—the part of a nerve cell that receives input from
other neurons. Thus, this branching allows neurons to form many different
synapses, or connections, with many other neurons, permitting much cross
talk between them. Neurons taken from mice lacking the CREST gene are more
linear, like a plant shoot.
In addition, when
individual neurons kept alive in a Petri dish are stimulated with calcium
ions, they respond by developing highly branched dendrites, but neurons
taken from mice lacking CREST fail to branch in response to calcium.
“CREST is the first
example of a transcription factor—a protein that turns genes on and
off—that appears to be specifically required for the development of brain
neurons after birth," explains Ghosh, who conducted the study at his
former laboratory at Johns Hopkins.
His new laboratory at
UCSD is currently working to determine what gene is targeted by CREST.
Ghosh suspects the CREST gene might be turning on the production of
chemicals called growth factors, for the stimulatory effect they have on
cell development.
The CREST protein
produced by that gene is made in several regions of the brain immediately
after birth. In adults, the protein is produced in a region of the brain
known as the hippocampus, which plays an important role in learning and
memory. Because of this, Ghosh suspects that CREST may be necessary for the
storage of new memories and the ability to learn. His laboratory is
currently developing mice in which CREST expression is normal throughout
most of development, so the brain develops normally, but then shuts off in
the hippocampus when the mice reach adulthood. In this way, the researchers
can test the specific role of CREST in learning and memory in adults.
“Humans also have
CREST, and the CREST gene sequence is highly similar between mice and
humans,” says Ghosh. “If it turns out that CREST plays a role in learning
and memory in the mouse, then it is very likely it also plays a similar
role in humans.”
The other researchers
involved in the study are Hiroyuki Aizawa, Shu-Ching Hu, Kathryn Bobb,
Karthik Balakriashnan, Inga Gurevich and Mitra Cowan. The study was
supported by the National Institutes of Health, the March of Dimes Birth
Defects Foundation, the Klingenstein Foundation, Merck and the Uehara
Memorial Foundation.
Media Contact: Sherry Seethaler
(858) 534-4656
Comment: Anirvan Ghosh (858) 822-4142