The Journal of Neuroscience, July 2, 2003, 23(13)
Next Article 
This Week in the Journal
Cellular/Molecular
New Roles for ASICs
Acid-Sensing Ion Channel 1 Is Localized in Brain Regions with High Synaptic
Density and Contributes to Fear Conditioning
John A. Wemmie, Candice C. Askwith, Ejvis Lamani, Martin D. Cassell, John
H. Freeman Jr, and Michael J. Welsh (see pages
54965502)
Protons have long been known to evoke excitatory responses in central and
sensory neurons. The discovery several years ago of a family of acid-sensing
ion channels (ASICs) confirmed the idea that protons open specific channels.
With an activation range around neutral pH, these proton sensors are well
positioned to sense the pain of ischemia and injury in various peripheral
tissues. In the CNS, ASICs likely act as neuronal modulators. Some have
postulated that their localization in areas of intense synaptic activity
allows them to detect the slightly elevated concentration of protons released
from synaptic vesicles. Others have suggested roles in cerebral ischemia and
long-term potentiation. In this week's Journal, Wemmie et al.
examined the distribution of ASIC1a in the CNS. They found a remarkably wide
expression pattern in areas ranging from the whisker barrel cortex to the
striatum, all centers of strong excitatory input. Expression was particularly
intense in the amygdala. Following this lead, the group examined a possible
behavioral role for ASIC1a there; knock-out mice displayed a deficit in cue
and context fear conditioning. Although the expression pattern and channel
physiology of ASICs are now fairly well understood, their possible cellular
and behavioral roles have only begun to emerge.
Development/Plasticity/Repair
Endogenous Glucocorticoids in Cerebral Immunity
Glucocorticoids Play a Fundamental Role in Protecting the Brain during
Innate Immune Response
Sylvain Nadeau and Serge Rivest (see pages
55365544)
Neuroendocrine hormones are controlled by highly regulated feedback loops.
Thus it is not surprising that either too much or too little of a hormone can
be detrimental to brain function. In the case of glucocorticoids (GCs),
endogenous GCs regulate the immune response, yet stress-induced GCs can lead
to neuronal cell death. Exogenous glucocorticoids are widely used to reduce
autoimmune CNS diseases such as multiple sclerosis. GCs inhibit transcription
of immune-related genes, including proinflammatory signal cascades such as
those involving microglial-derived tumor necrosis factor
(TNF-
). In this issue, Kimpo and Rivest report that endogenous
glucocorticoids are essential to prevent an overly exuberant reaction to
antigens. For their experiments, they used single intrastriatal injections of
the Escherichia coli cell-wall component lipopolysaccharide (LPS).
The neuroinflammation induced by LPS was enhanced and accompanied by prominent
cell death after inhibition of GCs with RU486, a GC receptor antagonist.
Inhibition of TNF-
abolished the neurotoxic effect of RU486, and
TNF-
infusion mimicked the damage. Because inhibition of GCs prolonged
the inflammatory response, the authors suggest that endogenous GCs control the
balance between the short-term positive effects of these cytokines on
regeneration and the toxic effects of runaway activation of neuroinflammatory
cytokines.
Behavioral/Systems/Cognitive
Spike Timing in the Songbird
Propagation of Correlated Activity through Multiple Stages of a Neural
Circuit Rhea R. Kimpo, Frederic E. Theunissen, and Allison J. Doupe (see pages
57505761)
Action potentials within individual neurons in a single brain region can be
highly correlated. Such spike timing should be more effective in activating
downstream centers in a neural circuit. However, the variability in synaptic
transmission predicts that correlated spiking will degrade as the signal is
transmitted across multiple synaptic connections. The degradation could in
theory be prevented by factors such as high synaptic efficacy or a large pool
of synchronized neurons that drive the circuit. In this issue, Kimpo et al.
make use of the vocal control circuit in the songbird to examine correlated
spiking across multiple brain nuclei. They report that correlated spiking was
preserved across the entire circuit involving nuclei separated by three or
more synapses. The authors suggest that the high degree of interconnections
between these nuclei counterbalance the effect of unreliability of individual
synapses. They suggest that the similar architecture in mammalian basal
gangliacortical circuits may indicate that correlated spiking is a
general property of such motor learning pathways.

View larger version (31K):
[in this window]
[in a new window]
|
Models of possible connectivity patterns in the song system of the zebra
finch. Each row of circles denotes neurons within a song nucleus, and each row
represents a different song nucleus. The activity of neurons 1 and 2 is more
likely to be correlated in b or c than in a. This
image is taken from Figure 8 of this article.
|
|