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Researchers discover one cause of cognitive
decline in Aging Population
Newswise, June 2010 — Researchers at Mount Sinai School
of Medicine have found that certain types of
specializations on nerve cells called
“spines” are depleted as a person ages,
causing cognitive decline in the part of the
brain that mediates the highest levels of
learning.
These spines receive an important class of
synapses that are involved with the process
of learning. The discovery provides the
medical community with a new therapeutic
target to help prevent this loss of
function. The study is published in the June
2 issue of the Journal ofNeuroscience.
“We know that when we age, we lose certain
spines, but we did not know which ones and
how their loss impacted cognition,” said
John H. Morrison, PhD, Dean of Basic
Sciences and the Graduate School of
Biological Sciences and Professor of the
Department of Neuroscience, Mount Sinai
School of Medicine.
“This study shows which spines are lost and
what their impact is on brain function,
giving us a foundation to research treatment
interventions to protect against age-related
cognitive decline.”
The research team was led by Dr. Morrison
and Peter R. Rapp, PhD, Adjunct Professor of
Neuroscience at Mount Sinai School of
Medicine, with Dani Dumitriu, MD/PhD student
and Dr. Jiandong Hao, Adjunct Assistant
Professor at Mount Sinai School of Medicine
as the key investigators on the team and
co-first authors of the paper.
The
team studied six young adult and nine older
rhesus monkeys as they participated in a
delayed response test. The monkeys watched
as food was baited and hidden, and then a
screen was put in front of them so they
could no longer see the location of the
hidden reward.
At the beginning of the test, the screen was
raised immediately and the monkeys were able
to find the food reward right away. The
subject’s memory was tested by increasing
the time that the reward was blocked from
view to test if the monkeys retained where
the reward was placed over longer intervals
of time.
Aged monkeys performed significantly worse
on the tests than young monkeys, especially
as the time intervals increased.
Morrison’s team then used microscopic
techniques to visualize the spines on nerve
cells within the prefrontal cortex, an area
of the brain that mediates high level
learning.
Nerve
cells in the prefrontal cortex contain two
types of spines: thin, dynamic spines, which
are key to learning new things, establishing
rules, and planning, and large,
mushroom-shaped spines that are very stable
and likely mediate long-term memories and
highly stable information that we would
consider expertise.
The researchers determined that the older
monkeys lacked the thin spines but retained
the larger spines, indicating that the loss
of the thin spines may be responsible for
the monkeys’ inability to learn and retain
information during the test.
For the first time, the researchers
determined that the large spines were
stable, which provides a synaptic basis for
the observation that expertise and skills
learned early in life are often maintained
into old age.
“Researchers have long wondered why aging
affects our ability to learn and remember
new tasks and information, yet we retain
well-established information, such as career
expertise, well into old age,” continued Dr.
Morrison.
“These data indicate that there is a
biological reason why people cannot learn
new things at an older age, but can retain
knowledge learned years before, such as a
professor teaching into his 80s.”
Dr. Morrison noted that this study will
allow for the development of prevention
strategies in youth, such as further
emphasis on learning skills and broadening
expertise.
“The data also provide a foundation for
therapies to lessen cognitive decline,
through pharmaceutical and lifestyle
interventions,” he added.
Dr. Morrison and his team have also received
funding from the National Institute on Aging
(NIA) over the last ten years to study
cognitive performance in monkeys undergoing
menopause.
The funding supports research on whether
treatment with estrogen enhances cognitive
performance in monkeys after menopause and
which synaptic effects of estrogen are
critically important for cognitive
enhancement.
In future experiments, Dr. Morrison’s team
will test the idea of a “window of
opportunity,” to determine whether treatment
with hormone therapy needs to be initiated
soon after menopause to have the optimal
cognitive impact with little risk.
The National Institutes of Health (NIH)’s
Women’s Health Initiative showed that women
who took hormone therapy were at increased
risk for breast cancer and cognitive
decline.
However, the data only focused on women who
started therapy ten years after menopause.
Dr. Morrison’s study will evaluate the
impact of hormone therapy at the start of
menopause on cognition and determine if
adverse effect risk is reduced.
“We look forward to continuing to study the
impact aging has on cognition and potential
ways to reduce that impact,” said Dr.
Morrison.
“While hormone therapy has been
controversial in the past, we hope to show
that it can provide important cognitive
benefits with little risk if initiated
within a certain window of opportunity.”
The research published in the Journal of
Neuroscience was supported through a Merit
Award grant that Dr. Morrison received from
the NIH.
About The Mount Sinai Medical Center
The Mount Sinai Medical Center encompasses
both The Mount Sinai Hospital and Mount
Sinai School of Medicine. Established in
1968, Mount Sinai School of Medicine is one
of few medical schools embedded in a
hospital in the United States. It has more
than 3,400 faculty in 32 departments and 15
institutes, and ranks among the top 20
medical schools both in National Institute
of Health funding and by U.S. News & World
Report. The school received the 2009 Spencer
Foreman Award for Outstanding Community
Service from the Association of American
Medical Colleges.
The Mount Sinai Hospital, founded in 1852,
is a 1,171-bed tertiary- and quaternary-care
teaching facility and one of the nation’s
oldest, largest and most-respected voluntary
hospitals. In 2009, U.S. News & World Report
ranked The Mount Sinai Hospital among the
nation’s top 20 hospitals based on
reputation, patient safety, and other
patient-care factors. Nearly 60,000 people
were treated at Mount Sinai as inpatients
last year, and approximately 530,000
outpatient visits took place.
For more information, visit www.mountsinai.org.
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