[william/weblog]

— [insert pif tagline here] —

Single Brain Cell Can Hold a Memory

| 12 Comments


A neuron receives and processes information through a network of branches called dendrites. Once it processes the signal, the brain cell relays it along an axon to a terminal linking to another cell’s dendrites. When millions of brain cells communicate with each other at once, cognition occurs. Credit: L. Kibiuk for Society for Neuroscience

Memory has long been described as a function of brain cells getting together and forming connections. A new study finds single cells can remember things.

Individual nerve cells called neurons in the front part of the brain can hold traces of memories by themselves for up to a minute, perhaps longer.

The fleeting memories, found in mice brains, are held in the most highly evolved part of the brain in a manner akin to the nonpermanent working memory of a computer.

"It’s more like RAM [random access memory] on a computer than memory stored on a disk," said Don Cooper, assistant professor of psychiatry at the University of Texas Southwestern Medical Center. "The memory on the disk is more permanent and you can go back and access the same information repeatedly. RAM memory is rewritable temporary storage that allows multitasking."

Mice brains are thought to function much like human brains, so the finding could help scientists better understand how our brains store rapidly changing information. Cooper likened the temporary one-cell memory storage to the sort of thing a card shark does when counting cards in a game of Black Jack. As casinos know, this is the memory that is most sensitive to the disruptive effects of alcohol and noisy distractions, Cooper points out. Hence, perhaps, the free drinks casinos offer up.

The discovery, detailed in the February issue of Nature Neuroscience, could also lead to improved understanding of addictions, attention disorders and stress-related memory loss.

About the study

Researchers have known that permanent memories are stored when nerve cells in the brain reorganize and connections with one another are strengthened. "But this process takes minutes to hours to turn on and off and is too slow to buffer, or temporarily hold, rapidly incoming information," according to a statement today from the university.

As an example, studies find naps improve memory.

The new study found rapid-fire inputs less than a second long initiate a cellular memory process in single cells lasting as long as minute, a process called metabotropic glutamate transmission. The researchers identified in mice a specific metabotropic glutamate receptor called mGluR5 that, when turned on, starts a signaling cascade using calcium to hold a memory trace. This fast, short-term memory process happens inside individual cells; with long-term memory, additional proteins cause slow reorganization between cells in a network to establish a permanent memory.

Researchers examined brain cells from mice using nanoscale electrodes to measure the memory formation process.

To further understand how this short-term memory process relates to addiction, researchers applied the neurochemical dopamine to the memory buffer nerve cells. Dopamine is normally needed at an optimal level for an individual to focus attention and engage in fast decision-making memory, but drugs of abuse overload the brain with a surge of dopamine.

In the study, researchers found that an experimental drug that activates a specific type of dopamine receptor "focused" the nerve cells, making the memory trace less susceptible to distraction.

When researchers employed an animal model of drug addiction using cocaine, they also found that repeated exposure to addictive levels of cocaine reduced memory trace activation in the memory buffer cells. When researchers then activated dopamine signaling in the "addicted" animals, essentially adding more dopamine to their systems, no focusing effect was observed.

"This makes sense because we know from human and animal models of addiction, when a decision using working memory has to be made, brain imaging shows a deficit in the same area of the brain we looked at," Dr. Cooper said. "It all fits together."

–Blog post spotted from digg.com–

By LiveScience Staff

posted: 25 January 2009 02:25 pm ET

http://www.livescience.com/health/090125-memory-cell.html

Author: William Fleurant

A black-hat Bostonian with a Brahmin accent…

12 Comments

  1. Hey, would you like to submit comments and backlinks to millions of blogs automatically? Blog Comment Poster will do it for you. Blog Comment Poster will increase your traffic, backlinks and earnings dramatically! Sounds cool? Yes, it is cool! It’s the best automated comments posting tool on the Internet with many advanced features. Check it out!

  2. HVbruA rgatnptmukbr, [url=http://uecbbycbcxfw.com/]uecbbycbcxfw[/url], [link=http://fzaotwpqbnsn.com/]fzaotwpqbnsn[/link], http://tjkxzqtphvfx.com/

  3. After reading many posts about understanding drug addiction your article gave me the right thoughts i was searching for.

  4. Thank you, I could not have sead it better my self….order essay

  5. Thank you for your expertise
    Help others……

  6. You sound very Knowledgeable

  7. This is a wonderful research.

    r4 ds

  8. when nerve cells in the brain reorganize and connections with one another are strengthened?

    xbox 360 keyboard

  9. “When researchers employed an animal model of drug addiction using cocaine, they also found that repeated exposure to addictive levels of cocaine reduced memory trace activation in the memory buffer cells.”

    Its been quite some time that we have known that Drug abuse kills brain cells. Yet people continue to abuse drugs whether they are illegal or prescription drugs for that matter.

    We must educate our young people and give them options to deal with stress so that they don’t fall into the trap of drug abuse.

  10. You have certainly been very busy writing up this great post, It was very interesting to read. Can’t wait to see what you write about in the following month.

  11. really helpful, this is very inspirational. Thank you for your superb post.
    buy iPhone

Leave a Reply

Required fields are marked *.


Skip to toolbar