How can you build neuronal networks that are more
complex than anything known today? Researchers at the Max Planck Institute for
Brain Research in Frankfurt, Germany, have mapped the development of inhibitory
neuronal circuitry and report the discovery of distinct circuit formation
principles. Their findings enable scientists to monitor the change of neuronal
network structure with time, capturing moments when an individual grows and
adapts to its environment.
Neuronal circuits from pups and adolescent mice, mapped at high precision.© Max Planck Institute for Brain Research / J. Kuhl
Researchers are starting to better understand the
complexity of neuronal networks found in our and animals’ brains. But how can
such precise and convoluted neuronal circuitry be built in the first place? We
know how neurons are born, travel to their location in the gray matter, grow
and differentiate. But how and by what rules do the trillions of synapses – the
sophisticated contact points via which neurons “talk to teach other” – unfold,
often at highly precise locations to form our brain’s networks? In the work, a
team around Max Planck Director Moritz Helmstaedter analyzed a total of
thirteen 3-dimensional datasets from the cortex of mice during different stages
of development: after birth, at time points comparable to baby, child, teenager
and young adult. They used methods called “connectomics” to map out the
neuronal circuitry found in the gray matter of the cerebral cortex, where most
of the cerebral synapses are placed. By focusing on synapses of a type of nerve
cells called interneurons, which are known to inhibit the activity of other
neurons in highly specific ways, they were able to track the development of
synaptic partner choice for these particular types of nerve cells.
“Surprisingly, different types of interneurons followed very different time courses to establish their favorite synaptic partners. Some were able to innervate their synaptic targets with adult-like preference already in the first investigated circuit stages that correspond to baby brains. This happened immediately when the first chemical synapses were formed in the cortical gray matter. Others showed steep improvements of target choice, which were most likely caused by removal of incorrectly placed synapses,” explains Anjali Gour, a PhD student in the department and the first author of this study.
Snapshots from the connectome
Connectomes from the developing brain: monitoring the formation of inhibitory circuits from birth to adulthood.© Reprinted with permission from A. Gour et al., Science DOI: 10.1126/science.abb4534 (2020)
Studies had found before that in some parts of the
brain, development not only involves the creation of new synapses but required
the removal of synapses, as well. The finding that synapse removal (or pruning)
has a precise and highly specific function for inhibitory circuit formation
was, however, a major surprise. The researchers also found that a major class
of interneurons, so-called Chandelier neurons, assumed to be fully established
only in early adolescence, show much earlier and more systematic innervation of
their synaptic partner structures than previously known.
These insights were possible in spite of the fact that
the mapping of connectomes is a “snapshot” technique: neuronal networks can be
measured in biopsies of brain tissue, but cannot be further followed over time
in the same piece of brain. Rather, many measurements from different brains
need to be made. “That we were able to still extract a clear developmental
profile from this data illustrates the density of information present in
connectomic data,” says Gour. “I would not have predicted that we would find
such clear circuit patterns in brains that are still under development,” she
adds.
The developmental processes of neuronal network
formation and their possible disruption are thought to be major contributors to
some of the main psychiatric disorders, and a particular focus of research has
identified a contribution of inhibitory circuits to these dysfunctions. Hence,
a precise and detailed understanding of inhibitory circuit is a prerequisite
for targeted analysis and possible interference in such disease conditions. “We
hope to be able to map much more precisely the normal and disrupted network
formation in cortical circuits for understanding possible alterations in
psychiatric disease, and possibly identify the phenotypes of connectopathies,”
says Helmstaedter.
What the researchers report in the paper corresponds
to “connectomic screening”, made possible by the much higher throughput of
connectomic methods achieved recently. “We expect this approach to become as
widely applicable as genetic screening: studying the structure of neuronal
networks under a large range of normal and diseased circumstances to understand
the alterations and commonalities that are found in mammalian brains.”
Source: https://www.mpg.de/16094918/1201-hirn-how-networks-form-charting-the-developing-brain-151365
Journal article (under paywall): https://science.sciencemag.org/content/early/2020/12/02/science.abb4534.abstract
Source: Charting
the developing brain – Scents of Science (myfusimotors.com)
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