Turning On the Switch for Plasticity in the Human Brain
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The most powerful substance in the human brain for neuronal communication is glutamate. It is by far the most abundant, and it’s implicated in all kinds of operations.
Among the most amazing is the slow restructuring of neural networks due to learning and memory acquisition, a process called synaptic plasticity. Glutamate is also of deep clinical interest: After stroke or brain injury and in neurodegenerative disease, glutamate can accumulate to toxic levels outside of neurons and damage or kill them.
of Johns Hopkins University School of Medicine, a familiar face at the ϲappas a faculty member and researcher, is hot on the trail of describing how glutamate signaling works in the brain to enable neuronal communication. In apaper last fall, Watanabe (along with severalϲappNeurobiology coursestudents) described how glutamate is released from neural synapses after the neuron fires. And today, Watanabe published a follow-up study in
![Schematic of proposed synaptic organization and events.](/sites/default/files/featured_images/Picture1.png)
“With this paper, we uncover how signals are transmitted across synapses to turn on the switch for plasticity,” Watanabe says. “We demonstrate that glutamate is first released near AMPA-type glutamate receptors, to relay the signal from one neuron to the next, and then near NMDA-type receptors immediately after the first signal to activate the switch for synaptic plasticity.”
This new study was also partly conducted in the ϲappNeurobiology course, where Watanabe is a faculty member. “It began in 2018 with (course students)Ի, and then we followed up in 2019 withԻ.Shuo Li, the first author, was my teaching assistant for the Neurobiology course for both years,” Watanabe says. He will be returning this summer to teach in the course --- and discover more!
Citation:
Shuo Li et al. (2021)Nature Communications, DOI: 10.1038/s41467-021-21004-x.