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Imaging of nerve cell branches stirs debate. (Showing Some Spine).


Two research groups have taken unprecedented, high-resolution images of nerve cells inside the brains of live mice--and come to seemingly contradictory views. Resolving their conflict about the stability of cell projections called dendritic spines could illuminate how the adult brain adapts to experience and stores information, say neuroscientists.

The research teams, which both report their work in the Dec. 19/26 Nature, studied different areas of the mouse cortex, the brain's outer layer. The group led by Karel Svoboda Karel Svoboda (19 December 1938 – 28 January 2007) was a Czech composer of popular music. He wrote music for many TV series in the 1970s. Works

Karel Svoboda was born in Prague, Czechoslovakia (now Prague, Czech Republic) and began his career as a pop composer
, a Howard Hughes Medical Institute Howard Hughes Medical Institute, (HHMI), nonprofit medical research organization founded in 1953 by Howard Hughes and largly funded from proceeds of the 1984–85 sale of Hughes Aircraft. Headquartered in Chevy Chase, Md.  investigator at Cold Spring Harbor (N.Y.) Laboratory, examined a cortical region Noun 1. cortical region - any of various regions of the cerebral cortex
cortical area

region, area - a part of an animal that has a special function or is supplied by a given artery or nerve; "in the abdominal region"
 that processes sensory information from a mouse's whiskers See metal whiskers. . The team led by Wen-Biao Gan of New York University New York University, mainly in New York City; coeducational; chartered 1831, opened 1832 as the Univ. of the City of New York, renamed 1896. It comprises 13 schools and colleges, maintaining 4 main centers (including the Medical Center) in the city, as well as the  School of Medicine investigated cortical cells that respond to visual information.

Both groups worked with mice genetically engineered genetically engineered adjective Recombinant, see there  to incorporate fluorescent proteins into the targeted nerve cells. Svoboda and his colleagues studied the green-glowing cells of their mice by implanting viewing windows in the rodents' skull. Gan's team instead thinned the skulls of their mice until they could image the nerve cells that glowed yellow.

Rafael Yuste of Columbia University Columbia University, mainly in New York City; founded 1754 as King's College by grant of King George II; first college in New York City, fifth oldest in the United States; one of the eight Ivy League institutions. , coauthor of a manual on imaging nerve cells, calls the experiments a "tour de force" that will set the stage for many similar studies in live animals.

Over days, weeks, and even months, the neuroscientists recorded images of the same rodent brains, focusing on the nerve cell branches known as dendrites. In particular, the groups studied each dendrite's many stubby stub·by  
adj. stub·bi·er, stub·bi·est
1.
a. Having the nature of or suggesting a stub, as in shortness, broadness, or thickness: stubby fingers and toes.

b.
 projections, or spines. Nerve cells communicate with each other through specialized junctions called synapses, and a dendritic spine provides the receiving end of a synapse synapse (sĭn`ăps), junction between various signal-transmitter cells, either between two neurons or between a neuron and a muscle or gland. A nerve impulse reaches the synapse through the axon, or transmitting end, of a nerve cell, or neuron. , according to according to
prep.
1. As stated or indicated by; on the authority of: according to historians.

2. In keeping with: according to instructions.

3.
 many neuroscientists.

In studies of 1-to-2-month-old mice, Svoboda and his colleagues found that although the dendrites of the mouse cortex remain stable, many of their spines quickly appear and vanish. The investigators report that about 50 percent of spines persist for more than a month, but the rest show up for only a few days or less. Trimming the whiskers of a mouse increases the percentage of spines that exist only briefly.

Svoboda's team considers its data as evidence for a dynamic adult brain in which synapse-based circuits are constantly remodeled by the formation and elimination of dendritic spines, especially in response to new experiences.

Yuste, however, cautions that not every spine contains a synapse, and synapses don't have to be on spines.

Gan's group envisions a more stable adult brain. Even in their 1-month-old mice, more than 70 percent of dendritic spines persisted for more than a month. And in mice 4 to 10 months old, around 96 percent of spines were stable for at least a month, many of them enduring much longer.

Some spines "can even be maintained over the lifetime of an animal," says Gan's colleague Jaime Grutzendler. The researchers suggest that such long-term spines may offer a way for the brain to store information such as memories.

Grutzendler questions whether Svoboda's team was really studying the adult brain because that group's mice were all young. The different brain regions examined may also partly account for the two groups' clashing data, he adds.

"The two papers are showing opposite results, something that doesn't happen too often in science. It draws the skepticism of all the people in the field," says a puzzled Yuste. "I find it hard to believe that one part of the cortex is very dynamic and the other is not."
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Author:Travis, J.
Publication:Science News
Geographic Code:1USA
Date:Dec 21, 2002
Words:568
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