Neurons have always been the starts of brain research, but scientists
are now realizing that nonneuronal cells known as glia-which make up
around 90 percent of cells in the brain-are not the mild-mannered
understudies they appeared to be. Some glia may even fire electrical
signals, a finding that overturns a central dogma of neuroscience that
holds that neurons are the only cells in the brain with such signaling
ability.



Last winter, when neuroscientists at University College London
<http://www.ucl.ac.uk>  examined glia known as Oligodendrocyte Precursor
Cells (OPCs), they where astounded to find that, just like neurons, one
subtype fired electrical signals in response to electrical stimulation.
Before this study little was known about the function of OPCs, says
study leader Ragnhildur Karadottir, except that they could develop into
new oligodendrocytes, a type of glial cell that forms an insulating
sheath around neurons like the rubber on an electrical cord.

"We were very surprised," Karadottir says. "The first thing
one learns in neuroscience is that neurons fire action potentials and
glia do not." The researchers suspect that in, these glia, action
potentials-the rapid electronic currents that travel along nerves-might
serve as a signal to insulate an active neuron.

Other recent findings are further eroding the idea that glia merely
provide food and support to neurons. Scientists have known for years
that glial cells play an integral role at the neuromuscular junction,
where nerves meet muscle in the body. But glia in the brain are much
more difficult to study because they are harder to isolate, image and
grow in the lab.

So a number of scientists are focusing on alternative ways to study
glia. This winter a

group of researchers at Stanford University compared the active genes of
neurons, oligodendrocytes and astrocytes, the stars-shaped glial cells
that fill the spaces between neurons. Some of the astrocyte genes they
found are important for phagocytosis, a crucial biological process by
which healthy cells engulf and destroy bacteria or dying cells. This
genetic footprint may indicate that astrocytes help to keep the brain
clean of dying cells and scar tissue, says John Cahoy, the graduate
student who led the study.

Many of the newly identified genes are completely unknown, however, and
Cahoy says that his research on glia is just a start. As neuroscientists
refine their understanding of the brain, they are realizing that
cognition is even more complex than anybody imagined. "We're
just opening the door on understanding how glial cells interact with
neurons," Cahoy says.

Happy Learning,


Yovan P. Putra
www.primastudy.com <http://www.primastudy.com/>
Expand your genius through  Total-Mind Learning  Series coaching 
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