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Complexity Digest 2000.13 - 05
http://comdig.unam.mx/index.php?id_issue=2000.13#458
27-Mar-2000

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New Images Of Movement In 	 Nerves, Science Daily, Ohio University
 









Aided by a microscope and a digital camera, a team of

researchers led by an Ohio University cell biologist has snapped

the first pictures of a sight that has eluded scientists for 15

years - tiny threads of protein key to the health of the nervous

system darting along nerve fibers.



What they've documented with time-lapse photography could one

day lead to a better understanding of nerve malfunction in Lou

Gehrig's disease and other, similar neurological disorders. 



For the past two decades, scientists have struggled to observe

how proteins critical to the growth and maintenance of the nervous

system travel through the body's network of nerves. In the March

issue of the journal Nature Cell Biology, Anthony Brown, Ohio

University associate professor of cell biology, and his colleagues

report on a new technique that allowed them to watch and

photograph the movement of microscopic threads of protein called

neurofilaments in nerve fibers. 



A logjam of this neurofilament movement, which blocks other

biological processes vital to the nerve's survival, has been seen

in patients with certain neurological disorders, such as Lou

Gehrig's disease. (…)



The researchers' observation of the neurofilament movement

(...) has provided a rare glimpse of slow axonal transport, the

process by which many of the proteins in the nerve cell's

cytoplasm travel from the nerve cell body along the nerve fibers,

also called axons. These proteins are crucial for the development

and maintenance of axons, branch-like fibers that communicate

information from the nervous system to other areas of the body.





The study suggests that neurofilaments move in fast but

infrequent spurts - at rates of up to two-thousandths of a

millimeter per second. This finding argues against a previous

theory of slow axonal transport, which hypothesized that

neurofilaments and other transported proteins travel in a slow,

steady manner. The long pauses between the quick movements the

team observed may be one reason why scientists have had a hard

time tracking the process, Brown says. (…)



To make the movement visible, Brown's team fused DNA coding for

neurofilament protein with the DNA coding for the protein that

makes jellyfish glow green. But as most nerve fibers are packed

with neurofilaments along their entire length, at first all the

researchers could see was one long bright green strip. The

scientists solved the problem by studying nerve cells that had

fewer neurofilaments, which showed visible gaps in the green

fluorescence. They digitally photographed the movement of the

neurofilaments by waiting for them to sprint across these gaps.





"The gaps are basically like little windows on the cytoplasm of

the axon," Brown says. "They allow us to see movement that we

normally wouldn't be able to see. That really was the key." 



Now that the researchers have observed neurofilaments in

transit, Brown's laboratory will begin the study of how the

proteins move. "Only once we understand the mechanism of movement,

can we really start to understand the mechanism that might impair

movement," Brown says. 






Scientists

Capture New Images Of Movement In

Nerves, Science Daily,

Ohio University, 3/22/2000




See also: Rapid

movement of axonal neurofilaments interrupted by

prolonged pauses,

Lei Wang, Chung-liang Ho, Dongming Sun, Ronald

K.H. Liem and Anthony Brown, Nature Cell Biology, pp

137 - 141




To view a movie of the nerve

activity, go to http://www.nature.com/ncb//suppl/ncb0300/ncb0300_137/





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