A newly described type of nerve cell revealed by purple staining in the embryonic spinal cord. These cells obtain their input from touch-sensitive cells, send their axons from the spinal cord towards the brain and probably act as a guidance system for axons which grow out of the brain into the spinal cord. Credit: MPI of Neurobiology / Paixão
The progress a baby makes in the first year of life is amazing: a newborn can only wave its arms and legs about randomly, but not so long after the baby can reach out and pick up a crumb from the carpet. What happens in the nervous system that enables this change from random waving to finely coordinated movement? Scientists from the Max Planck Institute of Neurobiology in Martinsried near Munich, working with colleagues from New York and Philadelphia, have described a new type of nerve cell in mice which provides a valuable insight into this developmental phenomenon. During embryonic development, the projections from these cells grow from the spinal cord towards the brain. They may pave the way for other nerve cells which control voluntary movement and which only grow from the brain into the spinal cord after birth.
When we reach out towards an object with our hand or push our foot into a boot, our movements are coordinated and controlled by the brain. For this to be possible there must be a neural pathway for the brain to transmit instructions, for example to the foot; and also in the reverse direction, for stimuli from the surroundings of the foot to be passed back to the brain. Such neural pathways are formed when the projections (axons) grow out from nerve cells during development. Depending on the organism and the body part to be connected, the axons can grow to many centimetres in length. Rüdiger Klein and his team at the Max Planck Institute of Neurobiology investigate how the axons navigate through the body, and which molecules play a part in their pathfinding. In particular, the scientists have been focusing on the signalling molecules known as ephrins and their binding partners, the Eph receptors. Ephrins and Eph receptors are located on the surface of nerve cells, among other places, and help the growing cells find their way and locate their partner cells.
Some time ago, Rüdiger Klein and his team discovered in the mouse that ephrins and Eph receptors play a key role in the development of the neural networks which control our movements. The neurobiologists have been able to demonstrate that the ephrin/Eph system guides nerve cells which, after birth, send their axons from the brain into the spinal cord and direct voluntary movement in the arms and legs. In their investigations into axons which run in the opposite direction, namely from the spinal cord into the brain, the researchers came across a new cell type which also contained Eph receptors. "Just where the 'descending' axons were growing, we found the 'ascending' axons running in parallel", says Rüdiger Klein. "That obviously raised the question in our minds as to how this parallel growth is controlled during development."
Subsequent research by the neurobiologists uncovered something surprising: in contrast with the known cells, the ascending axons of the new cell type did not grow only after birth, but instead already during embryonic development. Moreover, their growth was guided by the same ephrin/Eph signalling system as that involved in the growth of the descending axons. "It would seem that during embryonic development the ascending axons would 'pre-drill' a channel for the descending axons which do not grow out until after birth", explains Rüdiger Klein.
Further investigations into the new, ascending nerve cells have made it clear that they obtain their input from specialised, touch-sensitive cells. A new feedback system could thus be involved here: voluntary movements are refined by signals from touch-sensitive cells, so adapting the intended movement to the environment and your foot slips into the boot. "What we found surprising is the fact that one and the same guidance system directs both the descending and the ascending axons", says Klein. "This is a wonderful example of how a highly complex nervous system can be built up by making flexible use of individual molecules, and thus a small number of genes." The next job for the scientists is to find out whether the suspected feedback system actually exists, i.e. whether the ascending and descending cells are connected via synapses. Their aim is to unravel step by step the developmental processes which enable the brain to coordinate sequences of movements.
Explore further: Scientists identify clue to regrowing nerve cells
More information: Sónia Paixão, Aarathi Balijepalli, Najet Serradj, Jingwen Niu, Wenqui Luo, John H. Martin, Rüdiger Klein, EphrinB3/EphA4-mediated guidance of ascending and descending spinal tracts, Neuron, 18 December 2013
Medical Xpress on facebook
Related Stories
Scientists identify clue to regrowing nerve cells
Nov 07, 2013
Researchers at Washington University School of Medicine in St. Louis have identified a chain reaction that triggers the regrowth of some damaged nerve cell branches, a discovery that one day may help improve ...
Researchers discover how retinal neurons claim the best brain connections
Oct 31, 2013
Real estate agents emphasize location, location, and – once more for good measure – location. It's the same in a developing brain, where billions of neurons vie for premium property to make connections. Neurons that stake ...
Protein creates paths for growing nerve cells
Dec 19, 2012
Working with mice, Johns Hopkins scientists have discovered that a particular protein helps nerve cells extend themselves along the spinal cord during mammalian development. Their results shed light on the ...
Glial cells assist in the repair of injured nerves
Jan 28, 2013
When a nerve is damaged, glial cells produce the protein neuregulin1 and thereby promote the regeneration of nerve tissue.
New research reveals critical knowledge about the nervous system
Nov 06, 2007
Uncover the neural communication links involved in myelination, the process of protecting a nerve’s axon, and it may become possible to reverse the breakdown of the nervous system’s electrical transmissions in such disorders ...
Recommended for you
Brain area attacked by Alzheimer's links learning and rewards
18 hours ago
One of the first areas of the brain to be attacked by Alzheimer's disease is more active when the brain isn't working very hard, and quiets down during the brain's peak performance.
3D technology from the film industry improve rehabilitation for stroke patients
20 hours ago
Researchers in Gothenburg have been using 3D technology from the film industry to analyze the everyday movements of stroke patients. The results, which are reported in a doctoral thesis at the Sahlgrenska Academy, indicate ...
Silencing synapses: Hope for a pharmacological solution to cocaine addiction
Dec 17, 2013
Imagine kicking a cocaine addiction by simply popping a pill that alters the way your brain processes chemical addiction. New research from the University of Pittsburgh suggests that a method of biologically manipulating ...
Changes in proteins may predict ALS progression
Dec 17, 2013
Measuring changes in certain proteins—called biomarkers—in people with amyotrophic lateral sclerosis may better predict the progression of the disease, according to scientists at Penn State College of Medicine.
The brain's data compression mechanisms: Neurons subtract images and use the differences
Dec 17, 2013
that's the information volume transmitted every second with every quick eye movement from the eye to the cerebrum. Researchers from the Ruhr-Universität Bochum (RUB) and the University of Osnabrück describe ...
Musical brain-reading sheds light on neural processing of music
Dec 17, 2013
Finnish and Danish researchers have developed a new method that performs decoding, or brain-reading, during continuous listening to real music. Based on recorded brain responses, the method predicts how certain ...
User comments
© Medical Xpress 2011-2013, Science X network
A newly described type of nerve cell revealed by purple staining in the embryonic spinal cord. These cells obtain their input from touch-sensitive cells, send their axons from the spinal cord towards the brain and probably act as a guidance system for axons which grow out of the brain into the spinal cord. Credit: MPI of Neurobiology / Paixão
The progress a baby makes in the first year of life is amazing: a newborn can only wave its arms and legs about randomly, but not so long after the baby can reach out and pick up a crumb from the carpet. What happens in the nervous system that enables this change from random waving to finely coordinated movement? Scientists from the Max Planck Institute of Neurobiology in Martinsried near Munich, working with colleagues from New York and Philadelphia, have described a new type of nerve cell in mice which provides a valuable insight into this developmental phenomenon. During embryonic development, the projections from these cells grow from the spinal cord towards the brain. They may pave the way for other nerve cells which control voluntary movement and which only grow from the brain into the spinal cord after birth.
When we reach out towards an object with our hand or push our foot into a boot, our movements are coordinated and controlled by the brain. For this to be possible there must be a neural pathway for the brain to transmit instructions, for example to the foot; and also in the reverse direction, for stimuli from the surroundings of the foot to be passed back to the brain. Such neural pathways are formed when the projections (axons) grow out from nerve cells during development. Depending on the organism and the body part to be connected, the axons can grow to many centimetres in length. Rüdiger Klein and his team at the Max Planck Institute of Neurobiology investigate how the axons navigate through the body, and which molecules play a part in their pathfinding. In particular, the scientists have been focusing on the signalling molecules known as ephrins and their binding partners, the Eph receptors. Ephrins and Eph receptors are located on the surface of nerve cells, among other places, and help the growing cells find their way and locate their partner cells.
Some time ago, Rüdiger Klein and his team discovered in the mouse that ephrins and Eph receptors play a key role in the development of the neural networks which control our movements. The neurobiologists have been able to demonstrate that the ephrin/Eph system guides nerve cells which, after birth, send their axons from the brain into the spinal cord and direct voluntary movement in the arms and legs. In their investigations into axons which run in the opposite direction, namely from the spinal cord into the brain, the researchers came across a new cell type which also contained Eph receptors. "Just where the 'descending' axons were growing, we found the 'ascending' axons running in parallel", says Rüdiger Klein. "That obviously raised the question in our minds as to how this parallel growth is controlled during development."
Subsequent research by the neurobiologists uncovered something surprising: in contrast with the known cells, the ascending axons of the new cell type did not grow only after birth, but instead already during embryonic development. Moreover, their growth was guided by the same ephrin/Eph signalling system as that involved in the growth of the descending axons. "It would seem that during embryonic development the ascending axons would 'pre-drill' a channel for the descending axons which do not grow out until after birth", explains Rüdiger Klein.
Further investigations into the new, ascending nerve cells have made it clear that they obtain their input from specialised, touch-sensitive cells. A new feedback system could thus be involved here: voluntary movements are refined by signals from touch-sensitive cells, so adapting the intended movement to the environment and your foot slips into the boot. "What we found surprising is the fact that one and the same guidance system directs both the descending and the ascending axons", says Klein. "This is a wonderful example of how a highly complex nervous system can be built up by making flexible use of individual molecules, and thus a small number of genes." The next job for the scientists is to find out whether the suspected feedback system actually exists, i.e. whether the ascending and descending cells are connected via synapses. Their aim is to unravel step by step the developmental processes which enable the brain to coordinate sequences of movements.
Explore further: Scientists identify clue to regrowing nerve cells
More information: Sónia Paixão, Aarathi Balijepalli, Najet Serradj, Jingwen Niu, Wenqui Luo, John H. Martin, Rüdiger Klein, EphrinB3/EphA4-mediated guidance of ascending and descending spinal tracts, Neuron, 18 December 2013
Medical Xpress on facebook
Related Stories
Scientists identify clue to regrowing nerve cells
Nov 07, 2013
Researchers at Washington University School of Medicine in St. Louis have identified a chain reaction that triggers the regrowth of some damaged nerve cell branches, a discovery that one day may help improve ...
Researchers discover how retinal neurons claim the best brain connections
Oct 31, 2013
Real estate agents emphasize location, location, and – once more for good measure – location. It's the same in a developing brain, where billions of neurons vie for premium property to make connections. Neurons that stake ...
Protein creates paths for growing nerve cells
Dec 19, 2012
Working with mice, Johns Hopkins scientists have discovered that a particular protein helps nerve cells extend themselves along the spinal cord during mammalian development. Their results shed light on the ...
Glial cells assist in the repair of injured nerves
Jan 28, 2013
When a nerve is damaged, glial cells produce the protein neuregulin1 and thereby promote the regeneration of nerve tissue.
New research reveals critical knowledge about the nervous system
Nov 06, 2007
Uncover the neural communication links involved in myelination, the process of protecting a nerve’s axon, and it may become possible to reverse the breakdown of the nervous system’s electrical transmissions in such disorders ...
Recommended for you
Brain area attacked by Alzheimer's links learning and rewards
18 hours ago
One of the first areas of the brain to be attacked by Alzheimer's disease is more active when the brain isn't working very hard, and quiets down during the brain's peak performance.
3D technology from the film industry improve rehabilitation for stroke patients
20 hours ago
Researchers in Gothenburg have been using 3D technology from the film industry to analyze the everyday movements of stroke patients. The results, which are reported in a doctoral thesis at the Sahlgrenska Academy, indicate ...
Silencing synapses: Hope for a pharmacological solution to cocaine addiction
Dec 17, 2013
Imagine kicking a cocaine addiction by simply popping a pill that alters the way your brain processes chemical addiction. New research from the University of Pittsburgh suggests that a method of biologically manipulating ...
Changes in proteins may predict ALS progression
Dec 17, 2013
Measuring changes in certain proteins—called biomarkers—in people with amyotrophic lateral sclerosis may better predict the progression of the disease, according to scientists at Penn State College of Medicine.
The brain's data compression mechanisms: Neurons subtract images and use the differences
Dec 17, 2013
that's the information volume transmitted every second with every quick eye movement from the eye to the cerebrum. Researchers from the Ruhr-Universität Bochum (RUB) and the University of Osnabrück describe ...
Musical brain-reading sheds light on neural processing of music
Dec 17, 2013
Finnish and Danish researchers have developed a new method that performs decoding, or brain-reading, during continuous listening to real music. Based on recorded brain responses, the method predicts how certain ...
User comments
© Medical Xpress 2011-2013, Science X network

0 comments:
Post a Comment