Science Of A Spotless Mind: Musashi Protein Plays Role In - TopicsExpress



          

Science Of A Spotless Mind: Musashi Protein Plays Role In Forgetfulness, Study Finds Forgetting is sometimes hard to do, but our brains would be in a bad place without it. Just like your hard drive, your brain has a finite amount of memory – sometimes the older, less relevant stuff has to be chucked to make way for the new. But just how do we go about forgetting? Is it an actively controlled process, or a passive one beyond our brain’s molecular control? Now, researchers from the University of Basel in Switzerland think they’ve found part of the answer. In a study published Thursday in the journal Cell, the scientists describe how they isolated a key molecular mechanism in memory loss -- the “musashi” protein msi-1, which is involved in the structure and functions of synaptic connections in the brain that allow signals to pass from one nerve cell to the other. The discovery originated in experiments with ringworms (Caenorhabditis elegans) . Researchers found that genetically modified ringworms lacking the musashi protein had much better recall of information on a learning experiment – they were less forgetful. Just how is musashi playing a role in memory? With further experiments, the scientists deduced that musashi can inhibit the synthesis of other molecules that help stabilize synaptic connections. The destabilization of these connections, in turn, leads to memory loss. (There’s another protein, adducin, that has the opposite function – it aids memory retention by stimulating the growth of synapses.)
Posted on: Sat, 15 Mar 2014 00:59:15 +0000

Trending Topics



Recently Viewed Topics




© 2015