How immune system’s T cells boost learning
May 4th, 2010 - 6:00 pm ICT by ANIWashington, May 4 (ANI): A new research has revealed how the immune system’s T cells can impact learning and memory.
Stress, sickness and depression can generate inflammation in the brain, which is detrimental to learning.
Now, a new study has shown that T cells can level the learning curve by producing a protein that fights inflammation.
Learning defects had been reported in mice lacking T cells, but how these cells boosted brain power was unknown.
A team led by Jonathan Kipnis (University of Virginia, Charlottesville) investigated the activity of these cells in mice trained to find their way through a water maze.
Training the mice caused T cells to accumulate in the membrane that surrounds the brain.
Once there, the cells produced a protein called interleukin-4 (IL-4), which reduced the abundance of inflammatory proteins known to hinder learning.
Mice lacking IL-4 had a hard time navigating the maze, but their learning disability could be reversed by giving them IL-4-producing T cells.
It’s not yet clear if IL-4 has similar effects in humans. If so, these findings could impact the design of new therapies aimed at boosting learning and memory in children with learning disabilities or adults with age-related dementia.
The study has appeared online in the Journal of Experimental Medicine. (ANI)
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