Star-shaped brain cells ‘essential for making long-term memories’
March 4th, 2011 - 12:52 pm ICT by ANIWashington, Mar 4 (ANI): Experts have found that star-shaped brain cells called astrocytes, which were earlier considered little more than structures to fill the gaps between all-important neurons, have a function that’s a lot more important.
Researchers at Mount Sinai School of Medicine have found that astrocytes are also essential for making long-term memories. When they don’t function properly, rats develop amnesia.
The new study shows that long-term memory formation depends on the delivery of lactate, an energy source derived from glycogen (a stored form of glucose), from astrocytes into neurons.
If that transfer is blocked in any number of ways, rats fail to remember events that happened days or a week before.
Cristina Alberini and her team studies long-term memory and the underlying changes in the brain responsible by exposing rats to a footshock.
After just one event, rats will form a lasting memory of the place where that footshock was delivered and avoid it. That avoidance behaviour offers a way to measure the memory.
“When events are emotionally charged, we remember them much better,” Alberini said.
Now, Alberini and her colleagues report that in the rat hippocampus (a region of the brain that is central to learning and memory) learning leads to a significant increase in extracellular lactate levels derived from glycogen stored in the astrocytes.
That breakdown of lactate is essential for long-term but not short-term memory formation. In the absence of glycogen breakdown, rats initially remembered their negative experience, but by a day later they had forgotten. When rats were retested days later, their memory loss persisted.
Rats also developed amnesia when the lactate transporters on either their astrocytes or neurons were disrupted. When lactate was delivered straight to the brains of rats whose transport of lactate out of astrocytes was blocked, their ability to remember things in the long-term was restored.
The results appear in the March 4th Cell. (ANI)
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