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More Than the Brain's Drain.


Does cerebrospinal fluid help the brain convey messages?

It may lack the majesty of the mighty Mississippi, but there's a vital river running through your head.

This neurological stream consists of cerebrospinal fluid (CSF Cerebrospinal Fluid (CSF) Analysis Definition

Cerebrospinal fluid (CSF) analysis is a laboratory test to examine a sample of the fluid surrounding the brain and spinal cord.
), a clear, colorless liquid that constantly bathes the brain and spinal cord. The average person has about 150 milliliters, less than a cupful, of this fluid within his or her body. Suggesting a new importance for CSF, some scientists are now arguing that its currents carry important signals for sleep, appetite, and sex.

Tissue called the choroid plexus, deep inside the brain, secretes most of the CSF. The fluid, which is about 99 percent water, starts its journey from the two lateral ventricles, which are side-by-side cavities in the upper brain, and then travels down to the third ventricle and on to the fourth, which is near the brain stem. From there, it either wells up over the brain's surface or flows down the spinal canal. Ultimately, it's absorbed into the bloodstream.

Since scientists discovered CSF, several roles have been recognized for the liquid. It helps provide the nervous system with a steady supply of nutrients. The brain also literally floats in CSF, which dramatically reduces the weight pressing down upon the spine.

Furthermore, the fluid provides a watery padding that protects the brain's fragile cellular network. Blows to the head would cause significantly more damage if CSF weren't there to absorb and diffuse the impact.

Finally, since it's replaced several times a day, CSF flushes the central nervous system. Biologists have compared cerebrospinal fluid to urine, another liquid created in the body that removes harmful substances.

"The [traditional] view is that the cerebrospinal fluid is the drainage system of the brain," notes Michael N. Lehman of the University of Cincinnati The University of Cincinnati is a coeducational public research university in Cincinnati, Ohio. Ranked as one of America’s top 25 public research universities and in the top 50 of all American research universities,[2]  College of Medicine.

While not dismissing these long-recognized roles, Lehman and a small group of scientists recently gathered to discuss whether this thin broth plays an even more active role. At a Society for Neuroscience For other uses, see SFN (disambiguation).

The Society for Neuroscience (SfN) is a professional society for basic scientists and physicians around the world whose research is focused on the study of the brain and nervous system.
 symposium in Los Angeles last November, they offered provocative evidence that CSF may actually comprise a river of information within the central nervous system.

The neuroscientists are quick to admit that they haven't yet proven that the body uses cerebrospinal fluid to send messages. "We're posing the question and determining the strength of the evidence," says Rae Silver of Columbia University.

Lehman and Silver organized the recent symposium because of an interest that grew out of their studies of the suprachiasmatic nuclei (SCN SCN Scan
SCN Sustainable Communities Network
SCN System Change Number (Oracle)
SCN Scientology
SCN Suprachiasmatic Nucleus
SCN Switched Circuit Network
SCN Standing Committee on Nutrition (UN) 
). This small region of the mammalian brain controls the daily, or circadian circadian /cir·ca·di·an/ (ser-ka´de-an) denoting a 24-hour period; see under rhythm.

cir·ca·di·an
adj.
Relating to biological variations or rhythms with a cycle of about 24 hours.
, rhythms of animals, including people. The SCN was thought to exert its influence by sending electrical signals to other areas of the brain via nerve cell connections.

Yet Lehman, Silver, and their colleagues found evidence that a soluble chemical released by the SCN acts as a circadian signal. They had encased en·case  
tr.v. en·cased, en·cas·ing, en·cas·es
To enclose in or as if in a case.



en·casement n.
 SCN tissue in a polymer capsule, which they implanted into the ventricles Ventricles
The two chambers of the heart that are involved in pumping blood. The right ventricle pumps blood into the lungs to receive oxygen. The left ventricle pumps blood into the circulation of the body to deliver oxygen to all of the body's organs and tissues.
 of hamsters whose own SCN tissue had been destroyed. The capsule prevented the nerve cells within from making connections to those outside. The encapsulated transplants nonetheless restored many of the animals' lost circadian rhythms, the researchers reported several years ago.

The SCN had previously been found to rhythmically secrete substances--the hormone vasopressin vasopressin (văz'ōprĕs`ĭn): see antidiuretic hormone. , for example--into CSF. Since the capsule allows chemicals to diffuse through it, Lehman and Silver speculated that in their experiments, a diffusible diffusible /dif·fus·ible/ (di-fuz´i-b'l) susceptible of becoming widely spread.  circadian signal was transmitted within the liquid to targets throughout the brain. Such a signal molecule has not yet been identified.

Other researchers have documented that molecules drifting in CSF can penetrate the brain. Miles Herkenham of the functional neuroanatomy neuroanatomy /neu·ro·anat·o·my/ (-ah-nat´ah-me) anatomy of the nervous system.

neu·ro·a·nat·o·my
n.
1. The branch of anatomy that deals with the nervous system.

2.
 section at the National Institute of Mental Health The National Institute of Mental Health (NIMH) is part of the federal government of the United States and the largest research organization in the world specializing in mental illness.  in Bethesda, Md., described at the symposium an example of such work.

His research team injected a radioactively labeled form of inulin inulin /in·u·lin/ (in´ul-in) a starch occurring in the rhizome of certain plants, yielding fructose on hydrolysis, and used in tests of renal function.

in·u·lin
n.
, a carbohydrate molecule that stays outside cells, into rodents' brain CSF and then monitored the marker's location. Herkenham showed in dramatic time-lapse images that within 4 hours, inulin had suffused suf·fuse  
tr.v. suf·fused, suf·fus·ing, suf·fus·es
To spread through or over, as with liquid, color, or light: "The sky above the roof is suffused with deep colors" 
 the extracellular space of the whole brain.

Other researchers have shown that even larger molecules, such as proteins that stimulate the growth of nerve cells, can depart from CSF and diffuse through brain tissue. "There is a potential, if you wait long enough, for these molecules to go long distances," says neuroscientist Charles Nicholson of the 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  Medical Center.

Given that potential, the question remains whether some areas of the brain release substances into the cerebrospinal fluid that signal other regions or perhaps the whole brain.

Some of the earliest research to hint at to allude to lightly, indirectly, or cautiously.

See also: Hint
 communication skills of CSF was performed on sleep-deprived animals, James M. Krueger of Washington State University Washington State University, at Pullman; land-grant and state supported; chartered 1890, opened 1892 as an agriculture college. From 1905 to 1959 it was the State College of Washington.  in Pullman told the symposium. Scientists observed many years ago that when they injected CSF from such animals into the ventricles of normally rested animals, sleep resulted. "There's something in cerebrospinal fluid that's transferable and induces sleep," says Krueger.

In fact, there are many such sleep-inducing substances in CSF (SN: 6/10/95, p. 356). Krueger's research group concentrates on interleukin-1, a protein originally implicated in the functioning of the immune system. The investigators have found that interleukin-1 most effectively induces sleep when it is injected into the subarachnoid space, the CSF-filled region covering the surface of the brain.

The researchers are now trying to determine whether CSF normally carries interleukin-1 to the sleep-triggering region of the brain. While the protein's concentration in CSF definitely increases as animals become sleep-deprived, the CSF might merely receive overflow from the brain rather than being the medium through which a command to sleep travels, says Krueger.

Appetite might be under the sway of CSF. Scientists have identified several substances that stimulate eating when injected into the brain. The most potent is a small protein called neuropeptide Y (SN: 7/27/96, p. 63).

Satya P. Kalra of the University of Florida University of Florida is the third-largest university in the United States, with 50,912 students (as of Fall 2006) and has the eighth-largest budget (nearly $1.9 billion per year). UF is home to 16 colleges and more than 150 research centers and institutes.  in Gainesville and his colleagues have been working to determine how the brain uses this neuropeptide neuropeptide /neu·ro·pep·tide/ (noor?o-pep´tid) any of the molecules composed of short chains of amino acids (endorphins, enkephalins, vasopressin, etc.) found in brain tissue.

neu·ro·pep·tide
n.
 to regulate eating. When they implanted a pump that constantly releases the peptide into the CSF-filled ventricles of rodents, the animals "eat and eat and eat," says Kalra.

Neuropeptide Y is normally present in CSF, which makes Kalra and his colleagues suspect that the fluid carries the peptide to the hypothalamus hypothalamus (hī'pəthăl`əməs), an important supervisory center in the brain, rich in ganglia, nerve fibers, and synaptic connections. It is composed of several sections called nuclei, each of which controls a specific function. , the brain region where the molecule seems to act to produce feeding behavior. Moreover in fasting animals, cells near the ventricles release the peptide, he notes.

Reproduction is as basic a function as sleeping and eating, and scientists suspect cerebrospinal fluid may influence it as well. Donal C. Skinner of the National Institute of Agronomy agronomy (əgrŏn`əmē), branch of agriculture dealing with various physical and biological factors—including soil management, tillage, crop rotation, breeding, weed control, and climate—related to crop production.  Research in Nouzilly, France, reported at the Los Angeles symposium that gonadotropin-releasing hormone (GnRH) appears in the CSF of sheep. The hormone's concentrations there rise and fall roughly in parallel with its abundance in blood.

Secreted primarily by the hypothalamus, GnRH normally stimulates the brain's pituitary gland to make luteinizing hormone and follicle-stimulating hormone. These two hormones drive the creation of eggs or sperm and, ultimately, sex hormones such as estrogen and testosterone. Curiously, Skinner says that the GnRH in cerebrospinal fluid does not seem to reach the pituitary gland.

Studies have suggested that GnRH also influences sexual behavior in many animals. One form of the hormone, for example, elicits courtship behavior in sparrows when it's injected into the birds' ventricles. Skinner's team is now studying whether the hormone's presence in the CSF bathing the brain regulates sheep sexual behavior.

The hormone melatonin melatonin: see pineal gland.
melatonin

Hormone secreted by the pineal gland of most vertebrates. It appears to be important in regulating sleeping cycles; more is produced at night, and test subjects injected with it become sleepy.
 is another candidate for a message conveyed by cerebrospinal fluid, Skinner's colleague Benoit Malpaux told the symposium participants. Produced by the brain's pineal gland pineal gland (pĭn`eəl), small organ (about the size of a pea) situated in the brain. Long considered vestigial in humans, the structure, which is also called the pineal body or the epiphysis, is present in most vertebrates. , this hormone regulates many daily biorhythms; it induces sleep, for example. It can also govern seasonal reproductive activity.

Since the pineal gland and the brain cells that melatonin targets are located close to the third ventricle, Malpaux suggests that the gland secretes the hormone directly into CSF. Indeed, he reports, the concentrations of melatonin in sheep's CSF are much higher than in their blood. The hormone follows a similar daily cycle in both fluids: Concentrations rise at night and fall during the day.

Determining the capabilities of cerebrospinal fluid is not just an academic exercise. In the Jan. 24, 1998 LANCET, for example, Edward Rubenstein of Stanford University noted that, with age, the brain's choroid plexus calcifies, which leads to a dramatic decline in the production of CSF. He suggests that changes in CSF physiology contribute to dementia in some elderly people.

Fully testing such a hypothesis, however, won't be possible until neuroscientists better understand the roles played by the brain's small, but mighty, river.
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Title Annotation:cerebrospinal fluid may affect sleep, appetite and sex
Author:TRAVIS, JOHN
Publication:Science News
Date:Jan 23, 1999
Words:1426
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