Week 7 Flashcards
Stress kills
Stress and anti-depressants have opposing
effects on:
1. ** in the ** of the **
2. Production of ** and ** in the
** and **
VEGF increases **
BDNF increases **
Stress kills
Stress and anti-depressants have opposing
effects on:
1. Neurogenesis in the SGZ of the dentate
gyrus
2. Production of VEGF and BDNF in the
cortex and hippocampus
VEGF increases proliferation in SGZ
BDNF increases neuronal survival
- The family of neurotrophins
* Synthesized as ** (~** AA) and then processed to ** long **
* ** as the prototypical growth factor
a) Maintains **, causes ** (previous in vitro assay)
b) Not required in **
* Brain-Derived Neurotrophic Factor (BDNF)
a) ~% homology with **; purified from **
* Neurotrophins: ** and **
a) **-based cloning - Neurotrophins & their receptors
a) p75LNTR: **; interestingly homology to **
Trk: ** (not **)
- The family of neurotrophins
* Synthesized as precursors (~250 AA) and then processed to 100-120 AA long proteins
* NGF as the prototypical growth factor
* Maintains cell survival, causes neurite outgrowth (previous in vitro assay)
* Not required in CNS
* Brain-Derived Neurotrophic Factor (BDNF)
* ~50% homology with NGF; purified from pig brains
* Neurotrophins: NT-3 and NT-4/5
* PCR-based cloning - Neurotrophins & their receptors
a) p75LNTR: Low affinity; interestingly homology to TNFR
Trk: tropomyosin-related kinase (not tyrosine kinase receptor)
- BDNF – potentiation story
* Stronger presynaptic input produces **
* BDNF release in turn activates ** and **
* **/ and ** generation (signaling molecule?)
* Synapses and LTP implications? - Healthy brains need BDNF- or do they?
* Identification of a ** in the BDNF gene - **
* Decreased secretion/release of BDNF resulting in **, reduced** as well as **
* Blocking normal BDNF signaling using ** antibodies reduces **, and reduces **and ** (such as the NCAM- 180 and N-cadherin, AMPA receptor complexes etc.)
* Appears to be particularly important in the **
- BDNF – potentiation story
* Stronger presynaptic input produces greater release including BDNF
* BDNF release in turn activates post- synaptic growth and AMPAR stability
* Synthesis/stabilization and nNOS generation (signaling molecule?)
* Synapses and LTP implications? - Healthy brains need BDNF- or do they?
* Identification of a polymorphism in the BDNF gene - Met66Val
* Decreased secretion/release of BDNF resulting in specific areas of reduction, reduced episodic memory function as well as increased anxiety and depression
* Blocking normal BDNF signaling using anti-TrkB antibodies reduces numbers of synapses, and reduces exercise-mediated
increases in memory and synaptic proteins (such as the NCAM- 180 and N-cadherin, AMPA receptor complexes etc.)
* Appears to be particularly important in the hippocampus
Why controls in science are important
* Originally examining the relationship
between the ** genotype and
**
* Found that ** look at the data!
* In fMRI imaging studies also showed
that having Met/Val ** than ** (smaller
cohort studies)
Why controls in science are important
* Originally examining the relationship
between the Met66 genotype and
schizophrenia
* Found that there was a significant
reduction in hippocampal dependent
memory – look at the data!
* In fMRI imaging studies also showed
that having Met/Val performed worse
in recall tests than Val/Val (smaller
cohort studies)
Measuring synaptic “health”
* How do you test for health of synapses and neurons in the hippocampus
* Have to rely on that can be picked up **or **
* In this case the marker – ** (**) was found to be lower in ** vs. ** subjects
Measuring synaptic “health”
* How do you test for health of synapses and neurons in the hippocampus
* Have to rely on having a marker that can be picked up via MRI or MRS
* In this case the marker – NAA (N-Acetyl –Aspartate) was found to be lower in Val/Met vs. Val/Val subjects
Visualization Methods-3H-MRS
* Magnetic resonance spectroscopy (MRS) really cool new technique that measures ** (not
**)
* Typically examine molecules such as **, and **
* It’s really exactly like the ** you would do in chemistry – done on a **that can be **as in the next example
- MRS used to measure **of ** and ** ( – normalized against **)
- Creatinine levels used because of
**and it has been shown
to be **
Visualization Methods-3H-MRS
* Magnetic resonance spectroscopy (MRS) really cool new technique that measures protons in other biomaterials (not
water)
* Typically examine molecules such as N-acetylaspartate, and creatinine
* It’s really exactly like the proton spectroscopy you would do in chemistry – done on a small volume of the brain that can be spatially localized as in the next example
- MRS used to measure health status of individual brain regions and neurons (NAA levels – normalized against creatinine)
- Creatinine levels used because of
characteristic peak and it has been shown
to be relatively constant in the brain