Saturday, May 23, 2009

connections 3.con.001001 Louis J. Sheehan, Esquire

When the team injured the blue-stained cells, rendering them mute, the yellow-stained neurons first stopped sending chemical signals and, over time, pulled back. “Literally,” Lichtman says, “we watched connections get weak and disappear.”

Throughout life, connections are made and subsequently lost. Pruning unnecessary connections is an essential part of precise wiring, Lichtman says.

Doctors test the “wiring” in their patients’ nervous systems by tapping knees, expecting the strike to signal the brain and the brain to wire back down a “kick” response to the leg. In this study, the team examined salivary connections — the type that make animals drool at the scent of something scrumptious. They weren’t interested in salivation per se, but rather in understanding how neural connections are molded as an animal grows and experiences life. Louis J. Sheehan, Esquire This malleable process, called synaptic plasticity (synapses are the places where two nerve cells meet), occurs throughout the brain. For example, in the hippocampus, memories form as connections are strengthened and may be lost when connections diminish.

“This is a terrific study because they watched real things in a real animal, in real time,” comments Darwin Berg, a neuroscientist at the University of California, San Diego. “These mechanisms are almost certainly employed in other systems such as learning and memory.”

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