KAIST 생명과학과동창회
  • News & Events
  • News

News

Astrocytes eat connections to maintain plasticity in adult brains

 

by The Korea Advanced Institute of Science and Technology (KAIST) 

  

 

    Astrocytes eat connections to maintain plasticity in adult brains

A 3-D image showing our synapse phagocytosis reporter in mouse hippocampus

 

Developing brains constantly sprout new neuronal connections called synapses as they learn and remember. Important connectionsthe ones that are repeatedly introduced, such as how to avoid dangerare nurtured and reinforced, while connections deemed unnecessary are pruned away. Adult brains undergo similar pruning, but it was unclear how or why synapses in the adult brain get eliminated.                      

    

Now, a team of KAIST researchers has found the mechanism underlying plasticity and, potentially, neurological disorders in adult brains. They published their findings on December 23 in Nature.

    

"Our findings have profound implications for our understanding of how neural circuits change during learning and memory, as well as in diseases," said paper author Won-Suk Chung, an assistant professor in the Department of Biological Sciences at KAIST. "Changes in synapse number have strong association with the prevalence of various neurological disorders, such as autism spectrum disorder, schizophrenia, frontotemporal dementia, and several forms of seizures."

    

Gray matter in the brain contains microglia and astrocytes, two complementary cells that, among other things, support neurons and synapses. Microglial are a frontline immunity defense, responsible for eating pathogens and dead cells, and astrocytes are star-shaped cells that help structure the brain and maintain homeostasis by helping to control signaling between neurons. According to Professor Chung, it is generally thought that microglial eat synapses as part of its clean-up effort in a process known as phagocytosis.

    

"Using novel tools, we show that, for the first time, it is astrocytes and not microglia that constantly eliminate excessive and unnecessary adult excitatory synaptic connections in response to neuronal activity," Professor Chung said. "Our paper challenges the general consensus in this field that microglia are the primary synapse phagocytes that control synapse numbers in the brain."

  

Professor Chung and his team developed a molecular sensor to detect synapse elimination by glial cells and quantified how often and by which type of cell synapses were eliminated. They also deployed it in a mouse model without MEGF10, the gene that allows astrocytes to eliminate synapses. Adult animals with this defective astrocytic phagocytosis had unusually increased excitatory synapse numbers in the hippocampus. Through a collaboration with Dr. Hyungju Park at KBRI, they showed that these increased excitatory synapses are functionally impaired, which cause defective learning and memory formation in MEGF10 deleted animals.

 

"Through this process, we show that, at least in the adult hippocampal CA1 region, astrocytes are the major player in eliminating synapses, and this astrocytic function is essential for controlling synapse number and plasticity," Chung said.

    

Professor Chung noted that researchers are only beginning to understand how synapse elimination affects maturation and homeostasis in the brain. In his group's preliminary data in other brain regions, it appears that each region has different rates of synaptic elimination by astrocytes. They suspect a variety of internal and external factors are influencing how astrocytes modulate each regional circuit, and plan to elucidate these variables.

 

"Our long-term goal is understanding how astrocyte-mediated synapse turnover affects the initiation and progression of various neurological disorders," Professor Chung said. "It is intriguing to postulate that modulating astrocytic phagocytosis to restore synaptic connectivity may be a novel strategy in treating various brain disorders."

 

https://www.sciencedaily.com/releases/2020/12/201224090406.htm 

https://sciencecodex.com/astrocytes-eat-connections-maintain-plasticity-adult-brains-664004  

https://medicalxpress.com/news/2020-12-astrocytes-plasticity-adult-brains.html 

https://www.news-medical.net/news/20201224/Researchers-find-mechanism-underlying-plasticity-in-adult-brains.aspx 

https://www.miragenews.com/astrocytes-eat-connections-to-maintain-plasticity-in-adult-brains/ 

https://microbiozindia.com/health-news/researchers-locate-mechanism-underlying-plasticity-in-grownup-brains/


List of Articles
번호 제목 글쓴이 날짜 조회 수
352 서성배 교수님_동물 뇌 신경세포가 과식 억제한다 생명과학과 2021.06.16 648
351 [조병관 교수님] 한국연구재단, 노화 방지하고 회춘하는 방법 제시 생명과학과 2022.01.13 651
350 양한슬 교수님_ 서경배과학재단 2021년 신진과학자 선정 file 생명과학과 2021.08.31 654
349 서성배 교수님_Gut hormone triggers craving for more proteins 생명과학과 2021.05.18 673
348 [정현정 교수님] 유전자 가위와 약물로 동시에 암을 잡는 신약 개발 생명과학과 2023.08.03 698
347 [김학성 교수님] 카이스트, 거대 단백질 구조체를 레고 블록 쌓듯 조립하는 기술 개발 생명과학과 2021.11.24 706
346 한진희 교수님_기억이 만들어지는 원리 최초로 규명했다 생명과학과 2021.07.14 710
345 [김상규 교수님] 꽃향기, 이젠 눈으로 보세요!​ 생명과학과 2022.05.10 713
344 전상용, 송지준 교수님_다양한 변이에도 면역 가능한 인플루엔자 백신 개발 생명과학과 2021.06.30 719
343 조병관 교수님_Antibiotic tolerance study paves way for new treatments 생명과학과 2021.03.03 729
342 김대수 교수님_“뇌의 본능적 욕구 참고 기다리는 아이, 사회적으로 성공” 생명과학과 2021.09.06 740
341 김진우 교수님, 천주교 서울대교구 생명위원회 제 15회 '생명의 신비상' 수상 생명과학과 2021.02.18 745
340 조병관교수님_온실가스를 바이오 물질로 전환…미생물 활용한 '인공광합성' 성공 생명과학과 2021.03.10 776
339 [오병하 교수님] 뉴스의인물/ KAIST 생명과학과 오병하 교수 생명과학과 2022.03.21 790
338 허원도 교수님(유다슬이 박사)_제10회 에쓰-오일 우수학위논문상'의 생명과학 분야 대상 수상 생명과학과 2021.02.22 800
337 [김세윤, 이대엽 교수님] "후성유전 조절하는 핵심 분자기전 찾았다" 생명과학과 2022.06.02 803
336 [송지준 교수님] 호르몬 조절 원리와 구조 밝혀냈다 생명과학과 2022.05.06 813
335 [임정훈 동문교수님] “초파리로 루게릭병 잡는다” 임정훈 분자생물학자 생명과학과 2022.04.04 830
334 오병하 교수님_자연에 없는 고감도 단백질 센서 제작 플랫폼 개발 생명과학과 2021.02.08 842
333 [김대수 교수님] '유퀴즈' 뇌과학자 김대수, 깻잎 논쟁 "절대로 해선 안 되는 행동" 생명과학과 2022.02.17 904
Board Pagination Prev 1 2 3 4 5 6 7 8 9 10 ... 22 Next
/ 22