Posted: Sat Mar 24, 2007 2:49 am
A recent study shed some more light on the cell molecular processes of central nervous system, and gave me an excuse to bump this thread up. Quote from the abstract:
Be well.
-finn
- "It is generally believed that fast transmitter release is restricted to nerve terminals that contact postsynaptic cells in the gray matter. Here we show in the rat brain that the neurotransmitter glutamate is also released at discrete sites along axons in white matter in the absence of neurons and nerve terminals."
- glutamate overdose is found to be able to cause cell death in central nervous system.
- it could partly explain changes seen in white matter in MS.
- some drugs with neuroprotective potential - like minocycline - can inhibit the toxicity produced by glutamate.
- any study that challenges current understanding may create progress in neurosciences in the long run.
- since axons in white matter are extensions of those in gray matter, negative changes in gray matter might make them produce too much glutamate in white matter.
- central nervous system might even try to compensate weakened connectivity caused by axonal degeneration with producing more neurotransmitter glutamate.
- too much glutamate might be able to kill oligodendrocytes (myelin making cells), and maybe the cell death could cause inflammation seen in white matter lesions.
- a relapse in RRMS might be caused by temporary overproduction of glutamate followed by death of oligodendrocytes and/or inflammation in white matter. And maybe a remission occurs only if central nervous system is able to rewire or reorganize itself (in fMRI studies it has been shown that performing even a simple task requires more activity in MS brain than in healthy brain).
- "On the other hand, under pathological conditions the widespread release of glutamate along axon tracts might be harmful: axonal transmitter release is likely to contribute to the ability ofNMDA receptors to mediate ischemic damage of mature oligodendrocytes. Therefore, drugs that modulate transmitter release in white matter might be promising therapeutic targets.
Axonal transmitter release might also challenge the concept of exclusively directed signal spread in neuronal networks of the CNS. As the axons in white matter are simply elongations of axons in gray matter, it seems likely that extrasynaptic transmitter release also occurs along intracortical axons and that this activates neurons that are not synaptically connected. The resulting spread of neuronal signals would strongly increase the apparent connectivity of neural circuits and could have a significant impact on information processing in the brain."
Be well.
-finn