Medical News Today
Article Date: 23 Jul 2007 - 4:00 PDT
Our experiences -- the things we see, hear, or do -- can trigger long-term
changes in the strength of the connections between nerve cells in our brain, and
these persistent changes are how the brain encodes information as memory. As
reported in Neuron, Johns Hopkins researchers have discovered a new
biochemical mechanism for memory storage, one that may have a connection with
addictive behavior.
Previously, the long-term changes in connection were
thought to only involve a fast form of electrical signaling in the brain,
electrical blips lasting about one-hundredth of a second. Now, neuroscience
professor David Linden, Ph.D., and his colleagues have shown another, much
slower form of electrical signaling lasting about a second can also be
persistently changed by experience.
They simulated natural brain
activity by applying short electrical jolts to slices of rat brain and measuring
the current flowing across the cells. After repeated jolting, the strength of
the slow nerve signals had dramatically decreased and remained at a low
intensity for 30 minutes after electrical jolts ceased.
These slow
signals are produced by a nerve cell receptor called mGluR1, which has been
associated with behaviors such as addiction and epilepsy. "Both of these
conditions also involve long-term changes in the function of nerve connections,"
says Linden. "So in addition to furthering our basic understanding of memory
storage, our work suggests that drugs designed to alter mGluR1 are promising
candidates for the treatment of addiction, epilepsy, and diseases of memory."
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Article adapted by Medical News Today
from original press release.
----------------------------
The
research was funded by the Republic of Korea Ministry of Health and Welfare and
the National Institutes of Health
Authors on the paper are Paul Worley
and Linden of Johns Hopkins and Sang Jeong Kim, Yunju Jin and Jun Kim of Seoul
National University College of Medicine
On the Web:
http://neuroscience.jhu.edu/DavidLinden.php
http://www.neuron.org/
Source: Nick Zagorski
Johns Hopkins Medical Institutions
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