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Study pinpoints autism-linked protein for sculpting brain connections

By R&D Editors | January 7, 2015

Non-neuronal cells called astrocytes (red) churn out hevin (green), a protein crucial for the refinement of neuronal connections in the developing brain. Image: Eroglu laboratory, Duke Univ., eLife 2014;10.7554/eLife.04047Shortly after birth, human brains expand rapidly with the experience of an entirely new world. During this period, neurons in the newborn brain compete with one another to form lasting connections, called synapses.

A new study by Duke Univ. researchers provides a close-up of synapse refinement and identifies a protein that is crucial in this process. Disruptions in the protein, called hevin, have previously been linked to autism, depression and suicide, but the molecule’s role in the developing brain was mostly unknown until now.

The researchers focused on tiny protrusions of the neuron called spines that harbor synaptic connections. Neuroscience has long assumed that these little nubs serve as sites for single synapses.

But this study, which appeared in eLife, shows that in the brains of newborn mice, some of the spines initially receive two or more inputs. As the brain matures, the spines then receive one. A technique known as 3-D electron microscopy made this observation possible.

“I was very excited about this finding,” said first author William Christopher Risher, a postdoctoral researcher in the laboratory of senior author Çagla Eroglu. “I went to check the literature to see if anyone’s really described [multiple-synapse spines] before. And there really hasn’t been much.”

The group also found that mice that are missing the gene that codes for the protein hevin retain more of these multiple synapses compared with normal mice. As the developing brain prunes away synapses to become more efficient, this could present problems.

Hevin was first identified in the miniscule spaces between synapses in 1990. However, gene expression studies showed that it is actually churned out by non-neuronal cells called astrocytes.

Interested in the relationship between astrocytes, synapse formation and disease, Eroglu’s group showed in 2011 that hevin triggers the formation of new neural connections. “That was the first description of hevin’s function in the nervous system,” said Eroglu, an assistant professor of cell biology and neurobiology, and a member of the Duke Institute for Brain Sciences.

“We continued studying this protein because it is abundant in many brain regions, [both] when synapses are forming and also during adulthood,” Eroglu said.

In the cortex, an area of the brain important for complex thought and awareness, hevin encourages inputs from the thalamus—a part of the brain that acts as a relay center for sensory and motor information—while it discourages inputs from local neurons within the cortex, the group found.

The spines that receive multiple synapses tend to be occupied by both cortical and thalamic connections at the same time, suggesting that these spines are sites for synaptic competition.

The balance of those two types of types of connections in the cortex could go awry in neurological diseases such as autism and depression, Eroglu said. The group is now studying the molecular mechanisms of hevin and its potential contribution to health and disease.

Source: Duke Univ.

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