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科学家在神经科学和视觉研究的进步

Thanks to a new study of the retina, scientists at UC Santa Barbara have developed a greater understanding of how the nervous system becomes wired during early development.
The findings reflect the expansion of developmental neurobiology and vision research at UCSB. The work is described in a recent publication of the Journal of Neuroscience.
The research team examined the connectivity of nerve cells, called neurons, in mice. Neurons communicate with one another via synapses where the dendrites and axon terminals of different cells form contacts. This is where nerve signals are transmitted from one neuron to another.
Scientists have understood for some time how neuronal activation at developing synapses contributes to the patterns of connectivity observed in maturity, explained Ben Reese, senior author and professor in UCSB's Neuroscience Research Institute and the Department of Psychological & Brain Sciences.
Incoming activity plays a critical role in sculpting neuronal form and the elaboration of synaptic connections. The new research shows, by contrast, how relationships between neighboring cells of the same type independently regulate neuronal size and connectivity.
The researchers circumvented the difficulty of visualizing the three-dimensional relationships between neurons within the brain by working within the retina. The retina is an outgrowth of the brain during embryonic development, and is a precisely layered structure in which the cells, their dendrites and their axons are restricted to discrete strata. "This makes the visualization and analysis of neuronal morphology and connectivity far simpler," said Reese.
The scientists used two genetically modified mouse models to modulate the density of one particular type of retinal neuron, a class of cone bipolar cell. Cone bipolar cells relay information from the population of cone photoreceptors to the retinal ganglion cells. The latter are neurons that in turn project information to locations within the brain where further visual processing of the retinal image takes place.
The lead author on the study, Sammy Lee, was a postdoctoral researcher working in Reese's lab and supported by a C.J. Martin National Health & Medical Research Council fellowship from Australia during the course of the study. Lee labeled individual cone bipolar cells with a fluorescent dye through a new microinjection procedure developed by Patrick Keeley, a graduate student in the Reese lab.
"What Dr. Lee has shown is that cone bipolar cells modulate the size of their dendritic fields (branched extensions of the neuron) in association with the local density of like-type neurons," said Reese. "One line of mice has conspicuously fewer cone bipolar cells, each now with a larger dendritic territory, while the other line shows heightened densities and correspondingly smaller dendritic fields."
Other studies have suggested such homotypic (like-type) modulation of dendritic field size, but the current study directly shows this modulation following genetic manipulation of neuronal density, according to Reese.
Additionally, the researchers found that connectivity with the afferent population of cone photoreceptors is impacted directly, with the larger dendritic fields being innervated by more cones, and the smaller dendritic fields connecting with fewer cones. At any individual cone, the number of dendritic endings associating with that cone was not observed to change, so that the total number of connections made by a cone bipolar cell was remarkably plastic, defined solely by the number of cone contacts formed.
"This developmental plasticity in dendritic growth and synapse number may be well-suited to ensure uniform coverage and connectivity between two populations of neurons - afferents and their targets - when the number of cells in each population is specified independently," said Reese.
Other studies from Reese's lab, recently reported in The Proceedings of the National Academy of Sciences and Investigative Ophthalmology and Visual Science, showed how neuronal number is tightly specified genetically, yet is highly variable between different strains of mice. "Wiring together two populations, each of which may vary nearly two-fold in size, yet independent of each other, might best be served by such homotypic plasticity during early development," he said.
Studies like these may prove relevant for re-establishing connectivity following nerve cell re-specification or replacement in degenerative diseases, particularly as advances in stem cell biology make this an increasing possibility, said Reese.
生命不息,战斗不止。
1# 凤凰涅盘
一个新的研究视网膜下,在加州大学圣巴巴拉分校的科学家已经开发出了一个更好地了解如何在早期发育过程中神经系统变得有线。
调查结果反映的发育神经生物学和视觉研究在UCSB的扩张。这项工作是在“神经科学杂志”最近发表的描述。
该研究小组研究了神经细胞的连接,称为神经细胞,在小鼠。神经元通过突触不同的细胞树突和轴突终末形成接触沟通。这是神经信号从一个神经元传递到另一个。
科学家们了解如何在发展中突触的神经元激活连接观察到的模式成熟了一段时间,本里斯解释说,在美国加州大学圣芭芭拉分校在神经科学研究所心理与脑科学部的资深作家,教授。
传入的​​活动起着雕刻的神经元形成突触连接拟定关键作用。新的研究表明,相比之下,邻近的相同类型的细胞之间的关系如何自主调节神经元的大小和连接。
研究人员绕过大脑内的神经元之间的三维关系的可视化视网膜内的工作的难度。视网膜是胚胎发育过程中大脑的产物,是一个精确的层状结构,细胞,树突和轴突限于离散阶层。 “这使得神经元的形态和连接简单得多的可视化和分析,”里斯说。
科学家利用转基因小鼠模型的一个特定类型的视网膜神经元,一类锥双极细胞的密度来调节。锥双极细胞传递信息,从人口的锥光感受器的视网膜神经节细胞。后者是神经元在大脑内的位置打开项目信息进一步的视网膜图像的视觉处理发生。
研究,萨米李,主要作者是博士后研究员,在里斯的实验室工作,并在研究过程中由来自澳大利亚的终审法院首席法官马丁国家卫生和医学研究理事会奖学金支持。李个别锥双极细胞与通过一项新的显微注射,在里斯实验室的研究生帕特里克克蕾开发过程的荧光染料标记。
“李博士显示的是锥双极细胞调节树突领域的大小与当地的类似类型的神经元密度协会(神经元的分支扩展),”里斯说。 “一行小鼠显眼少锥双极细胞,具有较大的树突状领土每个现在,而其他行显示了高度的密度和相对较小的树突状领域。”
其他的研究表明这种树突状字段大小的同型(如型)调制,但目前的研究表明这种调制的神经元密度的遗传操纵,依瑞斯。
此外,研究人员发现,与锥光感受器的传入人口连接是直接的影响,具有较大的树突状被更多的视锥细胞支配的领域,和较小的树突状领域用更少的视锥细胞连接。任何个人锥,关联,锥树突末梢没有观察到的变化,使总人数由锥双极细胞连接而成的显着塑料,只定义锥形成接触。
“这可能非常适合两个种群之间的神经元,以确保统一的覆盖和连通 - 传入和他们的目标 - 当每个人口中的细胞数量是独立树突生长和突触发育可塑性,”里斯说。
里斯的实验室,最近在国家科学研究院和调查的眼科和视觉科学会议论文集的报告,其他研究表明,神经元的数量是如何紧紧指定基因,但高度是不同品系的小鼠之间的变量的。 “两个种群,其中每个连接在一起可能会有所不同规模近2倍,但相互独立的,最好在早期发育过程中的同型可塑性服务,”他说。
里斯说,像这些研究可能证明重新建立连接下面的神经细胞重新规范或更换退化性疾病有关,特别是在干细胞生物学的进步,这是一个增加的可能性。
生命不息,战斗不止。
好消息啊!!!!
发现现在视力都不想看这么多文字啊,哎,只要好消息就好,不好意思了!
看不明白,只要是好消息就行!
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