For years, the human brain has been compared to a computer-but it is a
computer without a wiring diagram. Researchers simply do not know how
the billions of neurons in the brain are connected to one another, and
without this information they cannot fully understand how the
brain's structure gives rise to perception and behavior. Now, for
the first time, scientists have found a way to track the connections
between a single neuron and other cells-a discovery that could
eventually lead to a 3-D map of the brain's wiring.



A team led by Edward M. Callaway
<http://www.salk.edu/faculty/faculty_details.php?id=9>   of the Salt
Institute for Biological Studies in San Diego illuminated neuronal links
by modifying the rabies virus. The investigators remove the gene for a
protein that allows the virus to move between cells and let the crippled
virus inspect each nerve cell they want to study. Then, by inserting the
viral gene into these neurons, they cause each brain cell to manufacture
the missing protein, thereby restoring the virus's ability to move
into directly connected cells. From there, the virus cannot spread any
farther because its new neuronal hosts do not make the vital protein. A
few days, the fluorescent-dyed virus creates a glowing map of a single
neuron's every connection.

"Circuitry is the basis for all complex neural function,"
Callaway says. "Without knowing the circuit, there is no way to know
how the brain works." Although every brain has different synaptic
connections resulting from individual experiences, the researchers
believe they will be able to identify common circuits and eventually
figure out the function specific neuronal pathways. The team hopes to
work with animals within months and to begin to construct "a precise
wiring diagram of the mouse brain."

Happy Learning,





Yovan P. Putra

www.primastudy.com <http://www.primastudy.com>


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