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Researchers
show reduced ability of the Aging Brain to
respond to experience
Newswise, May 31, 2011 — Researchers at
Mount Sinai School of Medicine have
published new data on why the aging brain is
less resilient and less capable of learning
from life experiences. The findings provide
further insight into the cognitive decline
associated with aging and neurodegenerative
diseases like Alzheimer’s.
The study is published in the May 25 issue
of the Journal of Neuroscience.
The Mount Sinai team evaluated the
prefrontal cortex—the part of the brain that
controls a wide range of cognitive processes
and mediates the highest levels of learning.
Nerve cell circuitry in the prefrontal
cortex of young animals is highly plastic,
and life experiences, particularly those
that involve learning, can profoundly alter
prefrontal circuitry.
For example, stress causes nerve cells to
shrink and lose synapses—the sites of
communication between nerve cells in this
brain area of young animals—and the nerve
cells recover once the stress ends. In order
to investigate the effects of age on such
plasticity, young, middle-aged, and aged
rats were subjected to a behavioral stress
test known to elicit nerve cell changes in
the prefrontal cortex.
The research team then used microscopic
techniques to visualize the spines on nerve
cells within the prefrontal cortex. Spines
are specializations on nerve cells that form
the synapses that are critically important
to the process of learning.
In the young rats, the spines were able to
adjust and change, indicating that the brain
responded to the experience and initiated a
compensatory change. In the middle-aged
rats, and even more so in the aged rats, the
spines did not change, demonstrating that
age is accompanied by a profound loss in the
capacity of prefrontal cortex to “re-wire”
in response to life events.
“We suspected that these nerve cells would
be altered by age, but the loss of synaptic
plasticity in the context of life experience
has profound implications for age-related
cognitive decline,” said John H. Morrison,
PhD, Dean of Basic Sciences and the Graduate
School of Biological Sciences and Professor
in the Department of Neuroscience at Mount
Sinai School of Medicine. “This study
identifies precisely the synaptic basis for
age-related loss of experience-dependent
plasticity, which is likely required for
adaptive learning.”
The research team was led by Dr. Morrison
and graduate student Erik B. Bloss, who also
conducted an earlier study published in the
May 12, 2010 edition of the Journal of
Neuroscience. That study provided the first
evidence linking aging to a loss of
resilience: While the nerve cells of young
rats were resilient and able to recover from
stress, the brains of aged rats demonstrated
a profound loss of recovery-related
nerve-cell changes.
“The prefrontal cortex is constantly
‘rewiring’ in response to life experiences,”
said Dr. Morrison. “The aged brain has
already suffered significant spine loss, and
the spines that remain are unable to mount a
response to stress or learning, making this
part of the brain unable to effectively
rewire.
"These
findings give us a foundation to research
treatment interventions to protect against
age-related cognitive decline, which occurs
in diseases like Alzheimer’s. Since these
changes occurred in middle-aged rats and
more substantially in aged rats, the data
suggest that early interventions will likely
be required to sustain optimal synaptic and
cognitive health.”
Dr. Morrison and his team conclude that
further research is needed to determine if
the decreased spine density is due to a loss
of spines or a lack of new spines forming.
“Understanding how this process occurs, and
which aspects may be amenable to treatment,
should be a major goal for future studies
aimed at ameliorating changes in nerve cell
plasticity and cognition during aging.”
This study was supported by the National
Institute of Mental Health and the National
Institute of Aging.
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. U.S. News & World Report
consistently ranks The Mount Sinai Hospital
among the nation's best hospitals based on
reputation.
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