Researchers repair faulty
brain circuits using nanotechnology:
Working with mouse and
human tissue, Johns Hopkins Medicine researchers report new evidence that a protein
pumped out of some — but not all — populations of “helper” cells in the brain,
called astrocytes, plays a specific role in directing the formation of
connections among neurons needed for learning and forming new memories.
Using mice
genetically engineered and bred with fewer such connections, the researchers
conducted proof-of-concept experiments that show they could deliver corrective
proteins via nanoparticles to replace the missing protein needed for “road
repairs” on the defective neural highway.
Since such
connective networks are lost or damaged by neurodegenerative diseases such as
Alzheimer’s or certain types of intellectual disability, such as Norrie
disease, the researchers say their findings advance efforts to regrow and
repair the networks and potentially restore normal brain function. The findings
are described in the May issue of Nature Neuroscience.
In the
brain, astrocytes are the support cells that act as guides to direct new cells,
promote chemical signaling, and clean up byproducts of brain cell metabolism.
Rothstein’s
team focused on a particular astrocyte protein, glutamate transporter-1, which
previous studies suggested was lost from astrocytes in certain parts of brains
with neurodegenerative diseases. Like a biological vacuum cleaner, the protein
normally sucks up the chemical “messenger” glutamate from the spaces between
neurons after a message is sent to another cell, a step required to end the
transmission and prevent toxic levels of glutamate from building up.
When these
glutamate transporters disappear from certain parts of the brain –such as the
motor cortex and spinal cord in people with amyotrophic lateral sclerosis (ALS)
–glutamate hangs around much too long, sending messages that overexcite and
kill the cells.
To figure
out how the brain decides which cells need the glutamate transporters,
Rothstein and colleagues focused on the region of DNA in front of the gene that
typically controls the on-off switch needed to manufacture the protein. They
genetically engineered mice to glow red in every cell where the gene is
activated.
Normally,
the glutamate transporter is turned on in all astrocytes. But, by using between
1,000- and 7,000-bit segments of DNA code from the on-off switch for glutamate,
all the cells in the brain glowed red, including the neurons. It wasn’t until
the researchers tried the largest sequence of an 8,300-bit DNA code from this
location that the researchers began to see some selection in red cells. These
red cells were all astrocytes but only in certain layers of the brain’s cortex
in mice.
Because they
could identify these “8.3 red astrocytes,” the researchers thought they might
have a specific function different than other astrocytes in the brain. To find
out more precisely what these 8.3 red astrocytes do in the brain, the
researchers used a cell-sorting machine to separate the red astrocytes from the
uncolored ones in mouse brain cortical tissue, and then identified which genes
were turned on to much higher than usual levels in the red compared to the
uncolored cell populations. The researchers found that the 8.3 red astrocytes
turn on high levels of a gene that codes for a different protein known as
Norrin.
Rothstein’s
team took neurons from normal mouse brains, treated them with Norrin, and found
that those neurons grew more of the “branches” — or extensions — used to
transmit chemical messages among brain cells. Then, Rothstein says, the
researchers looked at the brains of mice engineered to lack Norrin, and saw
that these neurons had fewer branches than in healthy mice that made Norrin.
In another
set of experiments, the research team took the DNA code for Norrin plus the
8,300 “location” DNA and assembled them into deliverable nanoparticles. When
they injected the Norrin nanoparticles into the brains of mice engineered
without Norrin, the neurons in these mice began to quickly grow many more
branches, a process suggesting repair to neural networks. They repeated these
experiments with human neurons too.
Rothstein
notes that mutations in the Norrin protein that reduce levels of the protein in
people cause Norrie disease — a rare, genetic disorder that can lead to
blindness in infancy and intellectual disability. Because the researchers were
able to grow new branches for communication, they believe it may one day be
possible to use Norrin to treat some types of intellectual disabilities such as
Norrie disease.
Source: Nano Magazine
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