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MEMORY'S
MOLECULAR GATEKEEPER By Sean
Henahan, Access Excellence
BALTIMORE (4/22/96)-
The discovery of molecular gatekeeper
involving memory function offers new opportunities for
development treatments for stroke and neurological disorders,
report scientists at Johns Hopkins Universty.
The scientists discovered that calmodulin, a common molecule
found in all nerve cells, can shut important cell "gates,"
stemming a flow of calcium involved in creating memory that also
can contribute to stroke damage.
The discovery advances efforts to understand how the brain
creates memories by altering nerve cells, and may lead to new
possibilities for treatment of strokes and other disorders,
according to Michael Ehlers, a Johns Hopkins M.D./Ph.D. student.
Ehlers won a Hopkins Young Investigators' Day Award for his role
in the new discovery.
Working in the labs of Richard Huganir, Ph.D., a professor of
neuroscience at Johns Hopkins, Ehlers learned that calmodulin, a
molecule common to nerve cells, can slam shut gates on the
surface of nerve cells that allow chemicals to flow into the
cells.
When these gates, called NMDA glutamate receptors, open briefly,
nerve cells are stimulated, producing a chain reaction that
results in the creation or transmission of a message to another
nerve cell.
If the nerves are rapidly stimulated in a short period of time, a
magnesium "bolt" can be knocked off the gate, allowing calcium
ions to flow more freely into the nerve. Depending on how many
calcium ions flow in, the nerve cell may become a quicker and
stronger transmitter of messages or a slower and weaker
transmitter. Scientists call this synaptic plasticity, and
believe it is an important way the brain creates learning and
memory.
"Now that we know that calmodulin can affect this process, this
could provide us with a possible mechanism for controlling
whether nerves become stronger or weaker transmitters of
messages. This might one day help us improve learning and
memory," says Ehlers.
Researchers also think that NMDA receptors jam during a stroke in
their full open position, allowing the nerve cell to absorb a
fatal dose of calcium. Because calmodulin is found in most nerve
cells, it may be a potent tool for researchers trying to close
NMDA receptors and prevent nerve cell death.
The findings were published in Cell.
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