High-resolution real-time neuronal imaging
Neuronal cells have strange branching extensions with little knobby bulbs on them called spines, the places where one neuron communicates with another. In pioneering work, scientists have stimulated individual synapses and imaged spine changes.
Neurons have a unique morphology compared to most other cells in the
body that are an approximate sphere. In addition to the cell body, they
have specialised extensions for sending and receiving information. A
branched dendritic tree comes off one region of the cell body and a
single long axon off another.
Cells are small and dendrites even smaller. To complicate the
picture a little more, the dendrites themselves have little knobby
mushroom-shaped protrusions called dendritic spines. It is here that the
synapses or junctions between neurons do their magic. It is also here
that many neurological diseases find their origin.
Given their extremely tiny size and fast dynamics, studying them
in situ has been very difficult. Scientists launched the EU-funded
project 'Nanoscale photoactivation and imaging of synaptic spine
dynamics' (DYNASPINE) to develop and apply the techniques to do so.
Their ultimate goal was to correlate structure and function on the
single-synapse level in real time.
Neuronal signalling relies on a complicated interaction of chemical
and electrical components. Voltages along the membrane change, pores in
the membranes open and close, and ions and molecules move in and out.
Even the number, size and shape of spines demonstrate plasticity (the
ability to change). Such changes can accompany increases in synaptic
strength that last for long periods of time (long-term potentiation),
also induced by repeated stimulation. This phenomenon is thought to be
involved in learning and memory.
Scientists applied a combination of electrophysiological recordings
and one of the most advanced and high-resolution microscopy techniques
available, stimulated emission depletion microscopy. The team uncaged
photo-releasable glutamate, an excitatory neurotransmitter, to stimulate
receptors at a single synapse.
Experiments revealed the plasticity of the spine, in particular
shortening and widening of the spine neck, during synaptic potentiation.
They also showed that these structural changes had unexpectedly
different effects on chemical and electrical signalling, pointing to a
new layer of complexity in neuronal dendritic spine function.
DYNASPINE opened a new window on functioning dendritic spines.
Follow-up of this exciting research direction will be met with great
interest by the neuroscience community.
published: 2015-02-10