| What's
New:
Copper
helps brain function — could tweaking circuits make
us smarter?
By
Gwen Ericson
Sept.
25, 2006 -- The flow of copper in the brain has a previously
unrecognized role in cell death, learning and memory,
according to research at Washington University School
of Medicine in St. Louis. The researchers' findings
suggest that copper and its transporter, a protein called
Atp7a, are vital to human thinking. They speculate that
variations in the genes coding for Atp7a, as well as
other proteins of copper homeostasis, could partially
account for differences in thinking among individuals.
Using
rat and mouse nerve cells to study the role of copper
in the brain, the researchers found that the Atp7a protein
shuttles copper to neural synapses, the junctions that
allow nerves to talk to one another.
At
synapses, the metal ions affect important components
responsible for making neural connections stronger or
weaker. The changing strength of neural connections
— called synaptic plasticity — accounts for, among other
things, our ability to remember and learn.
"Why
don't we think a hundred times better than we do?"
asks senior author Jonathan Gitlin, M.D., the Helene
B. Roberson Professor of Pediatrics at Washington University
School of Medicine. "One answer to that question
is, perhaps we could — if the brain could make the right
connections. We've found that copper modulates very
critical events within the central nervous system that
influence how well we think."
The
research was led by neuroscience graduate students Michelle
Schlief, Ph.D., and Tim West, Ph.D., in collaboration
with Anne Marie Craig, Ph.D., and David M. Holtzman,
M.D., the Andrew B. and Gretchen P. Jones Professor
and head of the Department of Neurology and appears
online this week in the Proceedings of the National
Academy of Sciences.
The
researchers found that when a chemical signal, or neurotransmitter,
hits one of the microscopic antennas present at nerve
synapses, Atp7a reacts and quickly brings copper ions
from their storage areas within nerve cells to the cell
surface.
When
released into neural synapses, the copper damps down
the activity of these antennas, called NMDA receptors.
The activity of NMDA receptors determines how strong
the connections between nerves cells are and changes
in the receptors' activity are critical to cell survival,
learning and memory.
"In
the brain, some neurons have strong connections, and
some have weak connections, but this is changing all
the time," says Gitlin, who is also director of
genetics and genomic medicine at St. Louis Children's
Hospital and scientific director of the Children's Discovery
Institute. "The plasticity of the connections between
neurons is important for nerve cell survival and for
our ability to think the way we do. The NMDA receptors
are a large component of this process, and we've found
that Atp7a and copper are key factors controlling them."
Since
the Atp7a protein is responsible for moving copper in
nerves, variations in the gene for Atp7a could influence
copper flow in the nervous system and the function of
NMDA receptors.
The
researchers' findings stem from earlier research on
the rare neurodegenerative disorder Menkes disease,
which results from an abnormal Atp7a gene. The loss
of properly functioning Atp7a protein in Menkes patients
leads to impairment of copper distribution in the body.
Children born with the disease have intractable seizures
and mental retardation and seldom live beyond the age
of ten.
The
current research showed that in mouse nerve cells that
lacked Atp7a and so were not able to bring copper to
synapses, the resulting high activity of NMDA receptors
caused excitotoxic cell death, a process that kills
nerve cells that have been overstimulated. This suggests
that in the brains of people with Menkes, NMDA receptors,
no longer appropriately modulated by copper, may kill
important neurons and cause neuronal degeneration.
Pharmaceutical
companies are working on drugs that inhibit excitotoxic
nerve cell death, and Gitlin thinks, in light of these
new findings, such compounds may someday lead to an
effective treatment for Menkes disease.
To
find out more about how copper and Atp7a influence thinking,
the researchers next plan to breed laboratory mice in
which they can selectively knock out Atp7a in the hippocampus,
an area of the brain essential to memory. Then they
can investigate whether these mice have problems performing
tasks they had once learned.
Schlief
ML, West T, Craig AM, Holtzman DM, Gitlin JD. Role of
the Menkes copper-transporting ATPase in NMDA receptor-mediated
neuronal toxicity. Proceedings of the National Academy
of Sciences Sept. 25, 2006 (electronic publication before
print).
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