http://www.sciencedaily.com/releases/2010/05/100506121751.htm
Different types of stem cells in the brain of mature mice. (Credit: Verdon Taylor (from: Lugert
et al., Cell Stem Cell, May 7th, 2010))
After birth the brain loses many nerve cells and this continues throughout life -- most neurons
are formed before birth, after which many excess neurons degenerate. However, there are some
cells that are still capable of division in old age -- in the brains of mice, at least.
According to scientists from the Max Planck Institute of Immunobiology in Freiburg, different
types of neuronal stem cells exist that can create new neurons. While they divide continuously
and create new neurons in young animals, a large proportion of the cells in older animals
persist in a state of dormancy. However, the production of new cells can be reactivated, for
example, through physical activity or epileptic seizures. What happens in mice could also be
applicable to humans as neurons that are capable of dividing also occur in the human brain into
adulthood.
The research is published in the journal Cell Stem Cell.
You can't teach an old dog new tricks. The corresponding view that the brain loses learning and
memory capacity with advancing age prevailed for a long time. However, neuronal stem cells exist
in the hippocampus -- a region of the brain that plays a central role in learning and memory
functions -- that can produce new nerve cells throughout life. It is known from tests on mice
that the newly formed cells are integrated into the existing networks and play an important role
in the learning capacity of animals. Nonetheless, the formation of new cells declines with age
and the reasons for this were unknown up to now.
Together with colleagues from Dresden and Munich, the Freiburg researchers have now succeeded
in explaining for the first time why fewer new neurons are formed in the adult mouse brain. They
managed to identify different populations of neuronal stem cells, thereby demonstrating that the
hippocampus has active and dormant or inactive neuronal stem cells. "In young mice, the
stem cells divide four times more frequently than in older animals. However, the number of cells
in older animals is only slightly lower. Therefore, neuronal stem cells do not disappear with
age but are kept in reserve," explains Verdon Taylor from the Max Planck Institute of
Immunobiology.
The precise factors that influence the reactivation of dormant stem cells are not yet clear.
The cells can, however, be stimulated to divide again. The scientists observed more newborn
hippocampal neurons in physically active mice than in their inactive counterparts.
"Consequently, running promotes the formation of new neurons," says Verdon Taylor.
Pathological brain activity, for example that which occurs during epileptic seizures, also
triggers the division of the neuronal stem cells.
Horizontal and radial stem cells
The different stem cell populations are easy to distinguish under the microscope. The first
group comprises cells which lie perpendicular to the surface of the hippocampus. Most of these
radial stem cells are dormant. As opposed to this, over 80% of the cells in the group of
horizontal stem cells -- cells whose orientation runs parallel to the hippocampus surface --
continuously form new cells; the remaining 20% are dormant but sporadically become activated.
The activity of genes such as Notch, RBP-J and Sox2 is common to all of the cells.
Radial and horizontal stem cells differ not only in their arrangement, apparently they also
react to different stimuli. When the animals are physically active, some radial stem cells
abandon their dormant state and begin to divide, while this has little influence on the
horizontal stem cells. The result is that more radial stem cells divide in active mice. The
horizontal stem cells, in contrast, are also influenced by epileptic seizures.
It would appear that neuronal stem cells are not only found in the brains of mice. The presence
of neurons that are formed over the course of life has also been demonstrated in the human
hippocamus. Therefore, scientists suspect that different types of active and inactive stem cells
also arise in the human brain. It is possible that inactive stem cells in humans can also be
activated in a similar way to inactive stem cells in mice. "There are indicators that the
excessive formation of new neurons plays a role in epilepsy. The use of neuronal brain stem
cells in the treatment of brain injuries or degenerative diseases like Alzheimers may also be
possible one day," hopes Verdon Taylor.
May 9, 2010 (ScienceDaily)