This is probably where new intellectual pursuits prevent/delay dementia. But is your doctor going to put this into a stroke protocol? Fat chance!
http://news.ubc.ca/2014/02/24/new-ideas-change-your-brain-cells-ubc-research-2/
A new University of British Columbia study identifies an important
molecular change that occurs in the brain when we learn and remember.
Published this month in Nature Neuroscience, the research
shows that learning stimulates our brain cells in a manner that causes a
small fatty acid to attach to delta-catenin, a protein in the brain.
This biochemical modification is essential in producing the changes in
brain cell connectivity associated with learning, the study finds.
In animal models, the scientists found almost twice the amount of
modified delta-catenin in the brain after learning about new
environments. While delta-catenin has previously been linked to
learning, this study is the first to describe the protein’s role in the
molecular mechanism behind memory formation.
“More work is needed, but this discovery gives us a much better
understanding of the tools our brains use to learn and remember, and
provides insight into how these processes become disrupted in
neurological diseases,” says co-author Shernaz Bamji, an associate
professor in UBC’s Life Sciences Institute.
It may also provide an explanation for some mental disabilities, the
researchers say. People born without the gene have a severe form of
mental retardation called Cri-du-chat syndrome,
a rare genetic disorder named for the high-pitched cat-like cry of
affected infants. Disruption of the delta-catenin gene has also been
observed in some patients with schizophrenia.
“Brain activity can change both the structure of this protein, as
well as its function,” says Stefano Brigidi, first author of the article
and a PhD candidate Bamji’s laboratory. “When we introduced a mutation
that blocked the biochemical modification that occurs in healthy
subjects, we abolished the structural changes in brain’s cells that are
known to be important for memory formation.”
Background
According to the researchers, more work is needed to fully establish
the importance of delta-catenin in building the brain connectivity
behind learning and memory. Disruptions to these nerve cell connections
are also believed to cause neurodegenerative diseases such as
Alzheimer’s and Huntington disease. Understanding the biochemical
processes that are important for maintaining these connections may help
address the abnormalities in nerve cells that occur in these disease
states.
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