The Other
Half of the Brain
MOUNTING
EVIDENCE SUGGESTS THAT
GLIAL
CELLS, OVERLOOKED
FOR HALF
A CENTURY, MAY BE NEARLY AS
CRITICAL
TO THINKING AND LEARNING
AS NEURONS
ARE
By R.
Douglas Fields
JEFF JOHNSON
Hybrid Medical Animation
GLIAL
CELLS (red) outnumber neurons nine to one
in the
brain and the rest of the nervous system.
He placed
what was left of the brain in the trunk of his Buick Skylark and
embarked
on a road trip across the country to return it to Einstein’s
granddaughter.
One of
the respected scientists who examined sections of the
prized
brain was Marian C. Diamond of the University of California
at Berkeley. She found nothing unusual about the
number or size of
its neurons
(nerve cells). But in the association cortex, responsible for
high-level
cognition, she did discover a surprisingly large number of
nonneuronal
cells known as glia—a much greater concentration than
that found
in the average Albert’s head.
An odd
curiosity? Perhaps not. A growing body of evidence
suggests
that glial cells play a far more important role than historically
presumed.
For decades, physiologists focused on neurons as the
brain’s
prime communicators. Glia, even though they outnumber
nerve
cells nine to one, were thought to have only a maintenance role:
bringing
nutrients from blood vessels to neurons, maintaining a
healthy
balance of ions in the brain, and warding off pathogens that
evaded
the immune system. Propped up by glia, neurons were free to
communicate
across tiny contact points called synapses and to establish a web of connections that allow us to think, remember and jump
for joy.
That long-held
model of brain function could change dramatically if new findings about glia pan out. In the past several years, sensitive
imaging tests have shown that neurons and glia engage in a
two-way dialogue from embryonic development through old age.
Glia influence
the formation of synapses and help to determine which
neural
connections get stronger or weaker over time; such changes
are essential
to learning and to storing long-term memories. And the
most recent
work shows that glia also communicate among themselves, in a separate but parallel network to the neural network, influencing
how well the brain performs. Neuroscientists are cautious about assigning new prominence to glia too quickly, yet they are excited by the prospect that more
than half the brain has gone largely unexplored
and may contain a trove of information about how the mind works.
The recent
book Driving Mr. Albert tells the true story of pathologist
Thomas
Harvey, who performed the autopsy of Albert Einstein in
1955.
After finishing his task, Harvey irreverently took Einstein’s
brain
home, where he kept it floating in a plastic container for the next
40 years.
From time to time Harvey doled out small brain slices to scientists and pseudoscientists around the world who probed the tissue
for clues
to Einstein’s genius. But when Harvey reached his 80s, he placed what wasleft of the brain in the trunk of his Buick Skylark and embarked
on a road trip across the country
to return it to Einstein's granddaughter.
One of
the respected scientists who examined sections of the prized brain was Marian C. Diamond of the University of
California at Berkeley. She
found nothing unusal about the number or size of its neurons (nerve cells). But in the association cortex, responsible for
high level
cognition, shedid discover a surprisingly large number of nonneuronal cells known as glia - a much greater concentration than
the average Albert's head.
See Me,
Hear Me
THE MENTAL
PICTURE most people have of our nervous system
resembles
a tangle of wires that connect neurons. Each neuron has a
long,
outstretched branch—an axon—that carries electrical signals to
buds at
its end. Each bud emits neurotransmitters—chemical messenger molecules—across a short synaptic gap to a twiglike
receptor,
or dendrite,
on an adjacent neuron. But packed around the neurons
and axons
is a diverse population of glial cells. By the time of Einstein’s
death,
neuroscientists suspected that glial cells might contribute to information processing, but convincing evidence eluded them.
They eventually demoted glia, and
research on these cells slid into the backwater of science for a long time.
Astrocyte
glia activate distant neurons to help form memories.
Neuroscientists
failed to detect signaling among
glia, partly because they had insufficient analytical technology but primarily because they were looking in the wrong place. They incorrectly assumed that if glia could chatter they
would
use the same electrical mode of communication seen in neurons. That is, they would generate electrical impulses called action potentials that would ultimately cause the cells to release neurotransmitters across synapses,
igniting
more impulses in other neurons. Investigators did discover that glia had many of the same voltage-sensitive ion channels that generate electrical signals in axons, but they surmised that these channels merely allowed
glia to
sense indirectly the level of activity of adjacent neurons. They found that glial cells lacked the membrane properties required to actually propagate their own action
potentials.
What they
missed, and what advanced imaging techniques
have now revealed, is that glia rely on
chemical signals instead of electrical ones to
convey
messages.
Valuable
insights into how glia detect neuronal activity emerged by the mid-1990s, after neuroscientists established that glia had a variety of receptors on their membranes that
could respond to a range of chemicals,
including, in some cases, neurotransmitters. This discovery suggested that glia might communicate using chemical signals that
neurons did not recognize and at
times might react directly to neurotransmitters emitted by neurons.
For decades,
neuroscientists thought neurons did all the communicating
in the
brain and nervous system, and glial cells merely nurtured them,
even though
glia outnumber neurons nine to one. Improved imaging and listening instruments now show that glia communicate with neurons and with one another about messages traveling among neurons. Glia have the power to alter those
signals at the synaptic gaps between
neurons and can even influence where synapses
are formed.
Given
such prowess, glia may be critical to learning and to forming
memories,
as well as repairing nerve damage. Experiments are getting
under
way to find out.
To prove
such assertions, scientists first had to
show that glia actually do “listen in” on neuronal communication and take action based on
what they
“hear.” Earlier work indicated that an influx of calcium into glial cells could be a sign that they had been stimulated. Based on that notion, investigators devised a laboratory method called calcium imaging to see whether glial cells known as terminal Schwann cells— which surround synapses where nerves meet muscle cells—were sensitive to neuronal signals
emitted
at these junctions. The method confirmed that Schwann cells, at least, did respond to synaptic firing and that the reaction involved
an influx
of calcium ions into the cells. But
were glia limited only to eavesdropping on neuronal activity, by scavenging traces of
neurotransmitter
leaking from a synapse?
More general-function
Schwann cells also surround axons all along nerves in the body, not just at synapses, and oligodendrocyte glia cells
wrap around
axons in the central nervous system (brain and spinal cord). At my National Institutes of Health lab, we wanted to know if
glia could
monitor neural activity anywhere as it
flowed through axons in neural circuits. If so, how was that communication mediated? More
important,
how exactly would glia be affected by
what they heard?
To find
answers, we cultured sensory neurons (dorsal root ganglion, or DRG, cells) from mice in special lab dishes equipped with electrodes that would enable us to trigger action potentials in the axons.
We added Schwann
cells
to some cultures and oligodendrocytes to others.
We needed
to tap independently into the activity of the axons and the glia to determine if the latter were detecting the axon messages. We
used a
calcium-imaging technique to record visually what the cells were doing, introducing dye that fluoresces if it binds to calcium ions.
When an
axon fires, voltage-sensitive ion channels in the neuron’s membrane open, allowing calcium ions to enter. We would therefore expect to see the firing as a flash
of green fluorescence lighting up the entire neuron from the inside. As the concentration of calcium rose in a cell, the fluorescence would get brighter. The intensity could be measured by a photomultiplier tube, and
images of the glowing cells could
be digitized and displayed in pseudocolor on a monitor in real time—looking something like the radar images of rainstorms
shown on weather reports. If glial
cells heard the neuronal signals and did so in part by taking up calcium from their surroundings, they would
light
up as well, only later.
Staring
at a computer monitor in a darkened room, my NIH colleague, biologist Beth Stevens, and I knew that after months of preparation our hypothesis was about to be tested
with the flick of a switch. When
we turned on the stimulator, the
DRG neurons responded instantly, changing from blue to green to red and then white on a pseudocolor scale of calcium
concentration,
as calcium flooded into the axons. Initially, there were no changes in the Schwann cells or oligodendrocytes, but about
15 long
seconds later the glia suddenly began to
light up like bulbs on a string of Christmas lights. Somehow the cells
had detected the impulse activity in
the axons
and responded by raising the concentration of calcium in their own cytoplasm.
Glia Communicating
with Glia
THUS FAR
WE HAD confirmed that glia
sense
axon activity by taking in calcium. In
neurons,
calcium activates enzymes that produce neurotransmitters. Presumably, the influx in glial cells would also activate enzymes
that would
marshal a response. But what response was the cell attempting? More fundamentally, what exactly had triggered the calcium
influx?
Clues
came from previous work on other glial
cells in the brain known as astrocytes. One of their functions is to carry nutrients from capillaries to nerve cells; another is to maintain the optimal ionic conditions around neurons necessary for firing
impulses. Part of the latter job is
to remove excess neurotransmitters and ions that neurons release when they fire.
In a classic
1990 study, a group led by Stephen J. Smith
of Yale
University (now at Stanford University) used calcium
imaging
to show that the calcium concentration in an astrocyte would rise
suddenly
when the neurotransmitter glutamate was
added to a cell culture. Calcium waves soon spread throughout all the astrocytes in the
culture.
The astrocytes were responding as if the
neurotransmitter had just been released by a neuron, and they were essentially discussing
the news
of presumed neuronal firing among themselves.
Some neuroscientists
wondered whether the communication
occurred because calcium ions or
related signaling molecules simply passed
through open doorways connecting abutting
astrocytes. In 1996 S. Ben Kater and
his colleagues
at the University of Utah defused that
suspicion. Using a sharp microelectrode, they cut a straight line through a layer of astrocytes in culture, forming a cell-free void that would act like a highway separating burning
forests
on either side. But when they stimulated calcium waves on one side of the break, the waves spread to astrocytes across the void with
no difficulty.
The astrocytes had to be sending signals
through the extracellular medium, rather than through physical contact.
Intensive
research in many laboratories over the next few years showed similar results. Calcium responses could be induced in astrocytes by adding neurotransmitters or by using
electrodes to stimulate the release
of neurotransmitters from synapses. Meanwhile physiologists and biochemists were finding that glia had receptors for many of the same neurotransmitters neurons
use for synaptic communication, as well as most of the ion channels
that enable
neurons to fire action potentials.
THESE AND OTHER RESULTS led to confusion. Glial communication
is controlled by calcium influxes,
just as neuronal communication is. But electrical impulses trigger calcium changes in neurons, and no such impulse
exists
in or reaches glia. Was glial calcium influx initiated by a different electrical phenomenon or some other mechanism?
In their
glial experiments, researchers were noticing that a familiar molecule kept cropping up—ATP (adenosine triphosphate), known to
every
biology student as the energy source for cellular activities. Although it makes a great power pack, ATP also has many features that
make it
an excellent messenger molecule between cells. It is highly abundant inside cells but rare outside of them. It is small and therefore
diffuses
rapidly, and it breaks down quickly. All
these traits ensure that new messages conveyed by ATP molecules are not confused with
old messages.
Moreover, ATP is neatly packaged inside the tips of axons, where neurotransmitter molecules are stored; it is released together with neurotransmitters at synapses and can travel outside synapses, too.
In 1999
Peter B. Guthrie and his colleagues at
the University of Utah showed conclusively that when excited, astrocytes release ATP into
their
surroundings. The ATP binds to receptors on nearby astrocytes, prompting ion channels to open and allow an influx of calcium. The rise triggers ATP release from those
cells, setting off a chain reaction
of ATP-
mediated
calcium responses across the population of astrocytes.
A model
of how glia around an axon sense neuronal
activity and then communicate to other
glia residing at the axon’s synapse was
coming
together. The firing of neurons somehow induces glial cells around an axon to emit ATP, which causes calcium intake in neighboring glia, prompting more ATP
release, thereby activating communication
along a
string
of glia that can reach far from the initiating neuron. But how could the glia in our experiment be detecting the neuronal
firing, given that the axons made no synaptic connections with the glia and the axonal glia were nowhere near the synapse? Neurotransmitters were not the answer; they do not diffuse out of
axons
(if they did, they could act in unintended places in the brain, wreaking havoc). Perhaps ATP, which is released along with
neurotransmitters when axons fire,
was somehow escaping along the axon.
To test
this notion, we electrically stimulated pure cultures of DRG axons and then analyzed the medium. By exploiting the enzyme
that allows fireflies to glow—a
reaction that requires ATP—we were able to detect the release
of ATP
from axons by seeing the medium glow when
axons fired. We then added Schwann cells
to the culture and measured the calcium responses. They also lit up after axons fired an action potential. Yet when we added the enzyme apyrase, which rapidly destroys ATP— thereby intercepting the ATP before it could reach any Schwann cells—the glia remained dark when axons fired. The calcium response in the Schwann cells had been blocked, because
the cells
never received the ATP message.
ATP released
from an axon was indeed triggering calcium influx into Schwann cells. Using biochemical analysis and digital microscopy, we also showed that the influx caused signals to travel from the cells’ membrane to the nucleus, where
the genes are stored, causing various genes to switch on. Amazingly, by firing to communicate with other neurons, an axon could instruct the readout of genes in a glial cell and thus influence its behavior.
Axons
Control Glia’s Fate
TO THIS
POINT, work by us and others had
led to
the conclusion that a glial cell senses neuronal action potentials by detecting ATP that is either released by a firing axon or leaked
from the
synapse. The glial cell relays the message inside itself via calcium ions. The ions activate enzymes that release ATP to other
glial cells or activate enzymes
that control the readout of genes.
This insight
made us wonder what functions the genes might be controlling. Were they telling the glia to act in ways that would influence the neurons around them? Stevens
set out to answer this question
by focusing on the process that prompts production of the myelin insulation around axons, which clearly would affect a neuron.
This insulation is key to the conduction of nerve impulses at high speed over long distances. Its growth enables a baby to
gradually
hold up its head, and its destruction by
diseases such as multiple sclerosis causes severe impairment.
We turned
to myelin because we were curious about how an immature Schwann cell on an axon in the peripheral nervous system of a
a fetus
or infant knows which axons will need myelin
and when to start sheathing those axons and, alternatively, how it knows if it should
transform
itself into a cell that will not make insulation. Generally, only large-diameter axons need myelin. Could axon impulses or ATP release affect these decisions? We found that Schwann cells in culture proliferated more
slowly
when gathered around axons that were firing
than around axons that were quiet. Moreover,
the Schwann cells’ development was arrested and myelin formation was blocked. Adding ATP produced the same effects.
Working
with Vittorio Gallo and his colleagues in the adjacent NIH lab, however, we found a contrasting situation with the oligodendrocyte glia that form myelin in the brain.
ATP did not inhibit their proliferation,
but c
adenosine,
the substance left when phosphate molecules
in ATP are removed, stimulated the cells
to mature and form myelin. The two findings indicate that different receptors on glia provide a clever way for a neuron to send separate messages to glial cells
in the central or peripheral nervous system without having to make separate messenger molecules or specify message destinations.
Better
understanding of myelination is important. Every year thousands of people die and countless more are paralyzed or blinded because of demyelinating disease. Multiple sclerosis, for example, strikes one in 700
people. No one knows what exactly
initiates myelination, but adenosine is the first substance derived from an axon that has been found to stimulate
the process.
The fact that adenosine is released from
axons in response to axon firing means activity in the brain actually influences myelinization.
Such findings
could mark paths to treatment. Drugs resembling adenosine might help. Adding adenosine to stem cells could perhaps
turn them
into myelinating glia that are transplanted into damaged nerves.
Outside
the Neuronal Box
EXPERIMENTS
IN OUR LAB and others
strongly
suggest that ATP and adenosine mediate the messages coursing through networks of Schwann and oligodendrocyte glia cells and that calcium messages are induced in astrocyte
glia cells by ATP alone. But do
glia have the
power
to regulate the functioning of neurons, other than by producing myelin?
The answer
appears to be “yes.” Richard Robitaille of the University of Montreal saw the voltage produced by synapses on frog muscle become stronger or weaker depending on what chemicals he injected into Schwann cells at the synapse. When Eric A. Newman of the University of Minnesota touched the retina of a rat, waves of calcium sent by glia changed the
visual
neurons’ rate of firing. Studying slices of rat brain taken from the hippocampus—a region involved in memory—Maiken Nedergaard of New York Medical
College observed synapses increase
their electrical activity when adjacent
astrocytes stimulated calcium waves. Such
changes in synaptic strength are thought to be the fundamental means by which the nervous system changes its response through experience—a concept termed
plasticity, suggesting that glia might play a role in the cellular basis of learning.
One problem
arises from these observations. Like a wave of cheering fans sweeping across a stadium, the calcium waves spread throughout the entire population of astrocytes.
This large-scale
response is effective for managing the entire group, but it cannot convey a very complex message. The equivalent of “Go team!” might be useful in coordinating
general activity in the brain during the sleep-wake cycle or during a seizure, but local conversations are necessary if glial cells are to be involved in the intricacies
of information processing.
In a footnote
to their 1990 paper, Smith and his
colleagues stated that they believed neurons and glia carried on more discrete conversations. Still, the researchers lacked
experimental methods precise enough to deliver a
neurotransmitter
in a way that resembled what an
astrocyte would realistically experience at a synapse. In 2003 Philip G. Haydon of the
University
of Pennsylvania achieved this objective. He used improved laser technology to release such a small quantity of glutamate in
a
hippocampal
brain slice that it would be detected by only a single astrocyte. Under this condition, Haydon observed that an astrocyte
sent specific
calcium signals to just a small number of nearby astrocytes. As Haydon put it, in addition to calcium waves that affect astrocytes
globally,
“there is short-range connectivity between astrocytes.”
In other
words, discrete astrocyte circuits in the
brain coordinate activity with neuronal circuits. (The physical or biochemical factors that
define
these discrete astrocytic circuits are unknown at present.) Investigation by others has also indicated that astrocytes may strengthen
signaling
at synapses by secreting the same neurotransmitter the axon is releasing—in effect, amplifying the signal. The working hypothesis that Haydon and I, along with our colleagues, are reaching from these discoveries is that communication among astrocytes helps to activate neurons whose axons terminate
relatively far away and that this activity,
in turn, contributes to the release of neurotransmitters at distant synapses. This action would regulate how susceptible remote synapses are to undergoing a change in strength,
which
is the cellular mechanism underlying learning
and memory.
Results
announced at the Society for Neuroscience’s annual meeting in November 2003 support this notion and possibly expand the
role of
glia to include participation in the formation of new synapses. Some of the findings build on research done two years earlier by Ben A. Barres, Frank W. Pfrieger
and their colleagues at Stanford, who
reported that rat neurons grown in culture made more synapses when in the presence of astrocytes.
Perhaps
it should not be surprising that astrocytes can affect synapse formation at a distance. To form associations between stimuli
that are processed by different
circuits of neurons—the smell of a certain perfume, say, and
the emotions
it stirs about the person who wears
it—the brain must have ways to establish fast communication between neuronal circuits that are not wired together directly. If neurons are like telephones communicating electrically
through
hardwired synaptic connections, astrocytes may be like cell phones, communicating with chemical signals that are broadcast
widely but can be detected only
by other astrocytes that have the appropriate receptors tuned
to receive
the message. If signals can travel extensively through astrocyte circuits, then glia at one site could activate distant glia to coordinate
the firing
of neural networks across regions of the
brain.
Comparisons
of brains reveal that the proportion of glia to neurons increases greatly as animals move up the evolutionary ladder. Haydon wonders whether extensive connectivity among astrocytes might contribute to a greater
capacity
for learning. He and others are investigating this hypothesis in new experiments. Perhaps a higher concentration of glia, or a
more potent
type of glia, is what elevates certain humans to genius. Einstein taught us the value of daring to think outside the box. Neuroscientists looking beyond neurons to see
how glia may be involved in information
processing
are following
that lead.
FOR YEARS,
scientists assumed that only neurons
specify
the connections they make to other neurons.
But evidence
shows that glia can strongly influence
how many
synapses a neuron forms and where it
forms
them. Ben A. Barres and his colleagues at Stanford
University
found that when they grew neurons from a
rat’s
retina in a lab culture devoid of glial cells known
as astrocytes,
the neurons created very few
synapses.
When the researchers added astrocytes or
culture
medium that had been in contact with
astrocytes,
synapses formed abundantly. Barres
could
see the synapses and count them through a
microscope
as well as detect them by recording
electrical
activity (a sign that signals were flowing
through
synapses) with a microelectrode. He then
detected
in the medium two chemicals that are
released
by astrocytes to stimulate synapse
formation—a
fatty complex called apoE/cholesterol
and the
protein thrombospondin.
Meanwhile
Jeff W. Lichtman’s group at Washington
University
recorded muscle synapses in mice over
several
days or weeks as they formed and as they
were removed
during development (the time when
unneeded
synapses get pruned) or after injury. When
the images
were spliced into a time-lapse movie, it
appeared
that both synapse formation and
elimination
were influenced by nonneuronal cells,
seen as
ghostlike forces acting on the axon terminal.
Most recently,
Le Tian, Wesley Thompson and their associates at the
University
of Texas at Austin experimented with a mouse that had been
engineered
so that its Schwann glia cells fluoresced. This trait allowed
Thompson’s
team to collaborate with Lichtman’s group and watch glial cells
operate
at the junction where neurons meet muscle—a feat previously not
possible.
After a muscle axon is injured or cut, it withdraws, but a cluster of
neurotransmitter
receptors remains on the recipient side of a synapse.
Investigators
knew that an axon can regenerate and find its way back to the
abandoned
receptors by following the Schwann cells that remain.
But what
happens if the axon cannot find its way? Tracking the fluorescence,
Thompson’s
group saw that Schwann cells at intact synapses somehow sensed
that a
neighboring synapse was in trouble. Mysteriously, the Schwann cells
sprouted
branches that extended to the damaged synapse, forming a bridge along which the axon could grow a new projection to the receptors .
This work
clearly shows that glia help to determine where synaptic
connections
form. Researchers are now trying to exploit this power to treat
spinal
cord injuries by transplanting Schwann cells into damaged spinal
regions
in lab animals. —R.D.F.