Brain Support Cells Form Previously Unknown Network
Discovery offers new view of how the brain communicates
Experts usually describe the brain as a network of nerve cells (neurons) that send each other signals to pass along information. These neurons are maintained by another kind of brain cell, the star-shaped astrocyte, which ferries in nutrients and carries away waste.
Led by NYU Langone Health researchers, the study revealed that, like neurons, astrocytes form organized webs, which enables them to communicate with other specific astrocytes across the brain rather than only sending local, generalized signals. In some cases, the pathways link areas that were not already joined together by neurons.
"For more than a century, neuroscientists have thought of neurons as the main actors in the brain," said study lead author Melissa Cooper, PhD. "Yet our findings suggest that astrocytes, which are usually viewed as merely support cells, are also running their own widespread signaling pathway, adding another layer to how brain regions stay connected."
In earlier work,
This latest investigation is the first to map active, brain-wide communication networks built by astrocytes and to show that these pathways are highly specific, said
The findings, which will publish
For the study, the researchers used a harmless virus to deliver "network tracers" into astrocytes in selected brain regions of lab mice. These tracers tagged small molecules as the molecules passed through tiny channels called gap junctions, which link one astrocyte to another, allowing the team to see which cells were part of the same signaling pathway.
The scientists then made the mice's brains transparent and used a specialized microscope to capture three-dimensional images of every tagged astrocyte. By doing this across hundreds of mice, they could map astrocyte webs across brain areas. The tracing tool and brain-clearing method were designed to be relatively low-cost and easy to reproduce so other labs could use them to study the networks in many brain diseases.
In another part of the study, the team assessed mice that were genetically engineered to have astrocytes that lacked gap junctions. The communication networks largely disappeared, suggesting that the pathways are active and depend on these physical bridges.
"By challenging our understanding of how the brain communicates over long distances, our results may offer fresh insight into how it develops, ages, and behaves in conditions such as Alzheimer's and Parkinson's disease," said study co-senior author
Another key finding was that astrocyte networks are dynamic. When the team trimmed whiskers on one side of the mice's faces, a pathway from the region that processes whisker touch got smaller and reconnected to different astrocyte partners.
"The fact that astrocyte networks shrink and reroute after a loss of sensory signals suggests they may be shaped by experience," said study co-senior author
The authors plan to investigate which molecules move through the networks and to apply their tracing tool to models of brain disorders. They also hope to examine how these webs change during development and aging, said
Funding for the study was provided by National Institutes of Health grants R01EY033353, U19NS107616, P30AG066512, P30CA016087, T32MH019524, K99NS139313, and K00AG068343. Further funding was provided by Cure Alzheimer's Fund, the Leon Levy Scholarships in Neuroscience at The New York Academy of Sciences, the Pew Charitable Trusts postdoctoral fellowship, the Simons Foundation SURFiN fellowship, the Belfer Neurodegeneration Consortium, the Carol and Gene Ludwig Family Foundation, and the Swiss National Science Foundation.
Along with Drs. Cooper, Liddelow, and Chao, other NYU Langone researchers involved in the study are
About NYU Langone Health
NYU Langone Health is a fully integrated health system that consistently achieves the best patient outcomes through a rigorous focus on quality that has resulted in some of the lowest mortality rates in the nation. Vizient Inc. has ranked NYU Langone No. 1 out of 118 comprehensive academic medical centers across the nation for four years in a row, and U.S. News & World Report recently ranked four of its clinical specialties No. 1 in the nation. NYU Langone offers a comprehensive range of medical services with one high standard of care across seven inpatient locations, its Perlmutter Cancer Center, and more than 320 outpatient locations in the
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SOURCE NYU Grossman School of Medicine and NYU Langone Health
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