This week’s task of deciphering the Journal of Neuroscience
has felt much easier than the previous attempt.
There were two articles in the July 31, 2013 issue that
leapt off the screen, into my download file.
They are both about memory, a topic I have been considering deeply as I
read Suzanne Corkin’s book about H.M., Permanent Present Tense. Incidentally, I love this book, and I plan to
write to Dr. Corkin and thank her profusely for writing it.
The first article about memory is from Zhang and Little
and their colleagues. They examined
cellular changes that correspond to memory formation in flies. Yes, much of what we understand about genetic
control of cell function comes from research on fruit flies. Next time you swat one of those pests, remember
to thank it first. In this study the
researchers measured the flies’ ability to remember that a particular odor was
a signal for shock. Then they measured
the ability of a protein called Notch to cause accumulation of a protein called
CREB, which gets manufactured in the cell and then moves into the cell’s
nucleus, where it convinces specific genes to be transcribed. These genes then produce even more proteins,
which act to link cells together and promote their ability to communicate. It is clearly established that long-term
memory depends on physical changes in cells so that they establish connections
with each other, but the mechanisms and signals inside the cell that initiate
the new connections are still being worked out.
This research shows that the CREB production happens in a cycle, which
the authors propose allows the circuit that was activated by the odor + shock
situation to get re-stimulated every half hour or so, which strengthens the
circuit and allows the fly to remember the next day that that particular odor
is bad news.
It’s always fun to try deciphering a fly article—fly
researchers like to be creative with the names they give genes and proteins. The article mentions Klingon (attaches
neurons to glial cells). You can learn
anything on the Web, so I looked it up and found an alphabetical list including
armadillo, bag pipe, big brain, blown fuse, and cappuccino (I stopped at
C). See The Interactive Fly
for more! More importantly, the
mechanisms in fruit flies are remarkably similar to what is happening in our
own cells, so this type of work has provided important information about human
brain function.
While fruit flies have been invaluable tools for sleuthing
out the cellular mechanisms of memory, brain imaging techniques have provided a
window into the neural basis of memory in humans, even while they are
learning. Magnetic resonance imaging
(MRI) provides very clear and precise pictures of areas of brain cells (gray
matter), and a new form of MRI, called diffusion tensor imaging (DTI), allows
one to see the connectivity (white matter) between these areas of cells. Hofstetter and
colleagues used DTI to examine a specific area after humans AND rats
learned a new skill. The humans played
the video game The Need for Speed 16
times in 2 hours and had their brains scanned before and after playing. The rats learned the location of a hidden
platform in a pool of water over the course of one day, also being scanned
before and after “playing”. These time
frames are considered very short in the realm of brain imaging studies that aim
to show structural differences that arise from experience. DTI measures diffusivity of water molecules in
tissue. In nervous system white matter,
the water molecules typically align themselves along the length of the axon,
which is the part of the cell that extends from one brain area to another. A reduction in diffusivity is taken as a sign
that the axons have increased their capacity to send information. Hofstetter and colleagues showed that
learning in both humans and rats was associated with decreased diffusivity in
the fornix, a band of fibers that connects the hippocampus to other brain
structures. The researchers also
demonstrated that the change in white matter was correlated with increased
volume of the hippocampus gray matter. In addition, they examined in humans how
much they learned about the race course, asking them to arrange scenes of the
course in the order that they appear in the video. The more they learned about the course, the
less diffusivity they had in the fornix.
Oogy and I have designated August as the month that we each
sign up for a Craftsy class, with the hope of learning something new. She has decided on a class about shuttle tatting,
while so far I have chosen a free mini class on short row
techniques in knitting. Her tatting
class is about 245 minutes long, while my “mini” class is 135 minutes. While we are learning how to tat and short
row, perhaps the mean diffusivity of our fornix regions will decrease,
indicating that the connections between the hippocampus and the memory regions
that will eventually store our newfound knowledge have increased. While it would be impossible to show it directly,
we might also assume that our ability to form these new memories will be due to
cyclical CREB production in these brain areas.
Along with learning some new knitting skills, I also have
exercised my hippocampus and fornix recently with a trip to New York City, with
my buddy Selma Moss Ward. We traversed
much of Manhattan, beginning in the financial district, where Selma took this
great shot of One World Trade Center, I think from Fulton Street. We made our way uptown and found ourselves in
a yarn store on the upper west side, The
Yarn Company. I found one of Amy’s
designs especially appealing and procured it and a few skeins of Lorna’s Laces
sock yarn in NYC-inspired color ways unique to this shop. The design is for a hat in the tam o’shanter
style called Triboro
Tam. I’m making mine in the
suggested Buildings and Sky colorway, and if I like it enough, I’ll make
another in Newsprint.
It’s only recently that my trips to NYC have taken me
outside the general area between the train stations, so exploring the upper
west side and downtown has been very interesting. I’ve learned to navigate the grid of streets
and avenues by foot and subway, and now I can even say I’ve ridden in a taxi. Lots of CREB cycling through my hippocampus!
2 comments:
Can fornix be verbified? As in fornixate, fornixation, etc.?
Great idea!! I vote for fornixation!
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