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Honestly, my blog is a potpourri of biology, medicine, physics, computers and electronics. Loving science as a whole is my strength (and weakness too).
Physiology physics woven fine
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by Amiya Kumar Sarkar in Physiology physics woven fine
Modular probes given in eyedrops reach the brain, showing up genes, in disruptions of the blood brain barrier.... Read more »
Liu, C., You, Z., Ren, J., Kim, Y., Eikermann-Haerter, K., & Liu, P. (2007) Noninvasive delivery of gene targeting probes to live brains for transcription MRI. The FASEB Journal, 22(4), 1193-1203. DOI: 10.1096/fj.07-9557com
by Amiya Kumar Sarkar in Physiology physics woven fine
White matter tractography, a relatively new MRI based technique, can delineate fiber tracts and assist in surgical planning and research.... Read more »
P. Mukherjee,, J.I. Berman,, S.W. Chung,, C.P. Hess, & R.G. Henry. (2008) Diffusion Tensor MR Imaging and Fiber Tractography: Theoretic Underpinnings. AM J Neuroradiol . DOI: 10.3174/ajnr.A1051
by Amiya in Physiology physics woven fine
Principles of Nuclear Magnetic Resonance Imaging made simple, both for the common men and for the professionals alike.... Read more »
Ian L. Pykett, Ph.D., Jeffrey H. Newhouse, M.D., Ferdinando S. Buonanno, M.D., Thomas J. Brady, M.D., Mark R. Goldman, M.D., J. Philip Kistler, M.D., & Gerald M. Pohost, M.D. (1982) Principles of Nuclear Magnetic Resonance Imaging. Radiology. info:/
by Amiya in Physiology physics woven fine
Back in the time of the “black and white” motion picture days, when “talkies” weren’t even born, we still could make out the essence of what Charlie Chaplin had to “say”. We understood his unspoken words, courtesy a system of neuronal networking, called the mirror neuron system. Another example: you observe a man kissing ‘his’ girlfriend, ‘your’ neuronal network that would otherwise activate when you ‘actually’ kissed her, would fire! Mirror neurons are at work. Seems to me a bit like ‘mechanical resonance’, where the string of a guitar resonates (vibrates at the fundamental or overtone frequency of its chord's natural frequency of vibration) when a second guitar/chord is strummed nearby.It all began with the experiment led by Giacomo Rizzolatti, a neuroscientist at the University of Parma. His team wanted to locate regions in the brain which controlled hand and mouth actions in monkeys, such as grasping or licking of an object. So, they had placed electrodes in the ventral premotor cortex, a part of the brain, [see fig] of a macaque monkey with the hope that whenever ‘that part’ of the brain were activated, the electrode would activate an electronic circuitry and give an audible beep. But all hell broke loose when a student entered the lab with an ice cream in his hand. Every time he was raising the ice cream to his lips, the system responded with a beep! Thus, although the monkey wasn’t having the ice-cream himself (and not moving his limbs), the mere observation of ‘the act’ fired the neurons that would otherwise be stimulated if the monkey ‘actually’ indulged in ‘the act’. The mirror neuron area, ventral premotor cortex, is also known as ventral premotor area F5.Mirror neurons are defined as ‘those’ neurons that fire when an animal performs some work and also when the animal observes the ‘same work’ being performed by others. In humans, the activity has been traced down to the ‘premotor cortex’ and ‘inferior parietal cortex’ regions of the brain. When a part of the brain ‘fires’ (discharges), it becomes metabolically active and the areas of this enhanced activity may be mapped by a procedure called fMRI (functional Magnetic Resonance Imaging). In a study by Iacoboni et al, 23 right-handed participants were shown different types of image clips (figure on the left). The pictures consisted of a teapot, a mug, cookie jar and related objects in different contexts, action and intention. At the same time the subjects were shown the pictures, the participants’ brains were also being mapped by fMRI to assess the regions of the brain that lit up during the procedure. The premotor cortex and some other parts of the brain showed a significant signal increase on fMRI scans in the action and intention clips. But the signal increase in the Intention condition was much higher compared to the Action condition, with high activity recorded in visual areas and in the right inferior frontal cortex, they noted. Thus the mirror neuron areas of right inferior frontal cortex were involved in understanding the intentions of others, in addition to action recognition.This ‘sniffing’ of intention behind action is essential to social animals like humans and a deficit in understanding this is seen in autism, a developmental disorder where there is lack of social smile, aloofness, absent eye to eye contact and marked impairment in interpersonal interaction. Autistic children can see sad or happy faces but they fail to ‘read’ the underlying emotions (sadness or happiness). Normally, children acquire mirror neuron activity by the time they are 1 year old. Exactly how they ‘program’ their neurons into being mirror neurons is not known. Learning by Hebbian association has been proposed. Mirror neurons are also involved in language acquisition, empathy and even possibly mind reading, giving credence to the ‘theory of mind’. Telepathy and clairvoyance now seems plausible (psychologists frequently employ transference and counter-transference, kind of ‘feeling’ a patient by their ‘mirror neuron systems’ and consequently ‘filling’ the patient with his own thoughts to remedy patients, in clinical practice.)Considering their importance in social communication, our brain would have sufficient number of them. Here, I would like to wonder if pedestrian neurons could spontaneously organize into ‘mirror neuron system’ as a person watched say, an action film. Certainly, this can not happen in real-time, as there will be a delay due to visual processing and synaptic passage within the brain. But, given the plasticity of the brain and the dynamicity of dendritic spines, the idea seems conceivable. Mirror neurons also respond to sound. Breast milk ejection of a mother in response to her baby crying is an example. In cases of postoperative urinary retention, sound of running water has helped the patient to pass urine (1). This may be another example in point. It may also shed light about how ‘suggestion’ works in Hypnosis.Given the diverse range of inputs, the brain must manage (compress) its database as space within the skull is limited. It certainly can not afford to have different sets of mirror neurons for red oval tea cups or green cylindrical ones and so on. So, what the brain does is pattern matching by some ‘fuzzy logic’ or it may simply analyze the scene; break down the signal by some kind of Fourier analysis into simpler functions and then compare resulting signal with its prior database.Mirror neurons may explain the elusive LSD Flashback phenomenon. It occurs in LSD abusers who are NOT currently taking the drug, but find themselves in a situation reminiscent of a previous drug spree. The person gets a ‘kick’ even though he may have taken it days ago. Clearly, psychedelic lights may trigger a flashback (and watching violent TV programs has been found to activate mirror neurons in children). We should also ask ourselves if dreams, at least some of them, were the handiwork of some of these neurons.In her fantastic article ‘Cells That Read Minds’, Sandra Blakeslee ponders and exculpates all men from voyeurism:“In yet another realm, mirror neurons are powerfully activated by pornography, several scientists said. For example, when a man watches another man have sexual intercourse with a woman, the observer's mirror neurons spring into action. The vicarious thrill of watching sex, it turns out, is not so vicarious after all.”In a lighter vein it may be said that the search engine Google has developed 'mirror neuron like' properties. Just type, “how can i get my girl” in Google search box and watch: Google would ‘ping’ your intention and come up with some real smart choices.Last modified: neverReference: (1) Bailey & Love; A Short Practise of Surgery,18e, page 1230Mirror neurons and the simulation theory of mind-reading Cells That Read Minds THE MOTOR CORTEX... Read more »
Iacoboni M, Molnar-Szakacs I, Gallese V, Buccino G, Mazziotta JC, & Rizzolatti G. (2005) Grasping the intentions of others with one's own mirror neuron system. PLoS biology, 3(3). PMID: 15736981
by Amiya in Physiology physics woven fine
The word ‘microprocessor’ is generally used to designate VLSI and SLSI (Very/Super Large Scale Integrated circuits) devices which accept, decode and execute instructions presented in binary coded forms. They may be called the heart of the computer. RISC (Reduced Instruction Set Computer), on the other hand, is a type of microprocessor architecture that uses a simplified, yet highly-optimized set of instructions to deliver good performance. However, like ‘cell’ and ‘nucleus’, they too have been adopted in biology, and not without reason!Proteins are essential for cells as they perform various functions as enzymes, ion channels, receptors and so on. They are manufactured in the ribosomes, organelles present in the cytoplasm, under the instruction of messenger RNA (mRNA). This instruction code is encoded in the sequence of nucleotides that make the mRNA molecule. However, the sequence of nucleotides in mRNA is dictated in turn by the DNA that is present in the nucleus. Messenger RNA carries this message from the nucleus into the protein production units. But what would happen if we interfered with the ‘message’?RNA interference (RNAi) would occur affecting the regulation of gene expression. Micro RNAs (miRNA) are one of the small RNAs that regulate the expression of protein-encoding-genes, after the mRNA strand has formed. miRNAs have partly or fully complementary sequence to one or more mRNAs. This enables them to latch on to the mRNA molecule masking the ‘instruction codes’ in the mRNA strand, interfering with protein formation (translation). In other words, the gene has been silenced!miRNAs are first transcribed from DNA by the enzyme RNA polymerase II into primary miRNA (pri-miRNA). pri miRNA is then cleaved by another enzyme, RNAse III, called Drosha, into precursor miRNA (pre miRNA) (see the picture on the left). However, Drosha (an RNAase III endonuclease) is assisted by Pasha (partner of Drosha), another enzyme, in this task. Later, it was found out that these two resided in a 500 kilo Dalton complex, called the microprocessor (micro RNA processor). So far, all these have been happening in the nucleus of the cell. The pre miRNA then moves into the cytoplasm through the exportin 5 pathway. Next, Dicer, another RNase III endonuclease, makes a mature miRNA duplex, which is then ‘uploaded’ into a complex called RISC (RNA induced silencing complex). RISC then prevents translation of the mRNA strand, as the ‘partially’ complementary miRNA strand interferes with the translation of the mRNA molecule into specified amino acid sequences can not occur. We can compare complementarity of nucleotide bases in terms of a pair of gloves and its corresponding fingers. The information of the gloves' coordinates gets obliterated by the occupying fingers. This RISC dependent mechanism occurs in parts of the cytoplasm, called P bodies (‘p’ for processing).RNAi is very important for plants as they lack an immune system. Invading organisms can not dictate foreign protein formations as their RNAs are destroyed, not merely inhibited, as is usually seen in higher animals (animal miRNAs exhibit only imperfect homology to the mRNA in contrast to plants, and thus they only inhibit translation). Some of the tumor suppressor genes inhibit tumor formation by the action of miRNAs and not through protein formation. In humans, exploiting RNAi may be a useful tool in combating diseases such as cancer, AIDS etc. So it remains to be seen whether the microprocessor can bring a revolution in medicine and research as its counterpart in electronics did in the field of computing.Last modified: neverReference: Saumet, A., & Lecellier, C. (2006). Anti-viral RNA silencing: do we look like plants ? Retrovirology, 3 (1) DOI: 10.1186/1742-4690-3-3Processing of primary microRNAs by the Microprocessor complex. doi:10.1038/nature03049WikipediaThe Macro World of MicroRNA (pdf)... Read more »
Saumet, A., & Lecellier, C. (2006) Anti-viral RNA silencing: do we look like plants ?. Retrovirology, 3(1), 3. DOI: 10.1186/1742-4690-3-3
by Amiya in Physiology physics woven fine
I had previously written a little about stem cells. While researchers still don’t yet know exactly how the four factors transform the fully differentiated fibroblast cells back into pluripotency, possible explanations are pouring in.Pluripotency (by which the stem cell may become any tissue; muscle or nerve, for example) and “self renewal” (cells should not only differentiate, some ready stock of stem cells must be there for future need) are important determinants for stem cells.According to Shinya Yamanaka, the steps could be somewhat like this: c-Myc first confers the open chromatin state and immortality to the skin fibroblasts. But it also induces apoptosis by acting on the p53, “the guardian of the genome”. Apoptosis or cellular senescence causes the cells to die. Klf4 inhibits p53 induced apoptosis. Again, if we added only Klf4 and c-Myc we would get tumor cells (both being oncogenes). Oct4 here acts and makes ES like cells (ES= Embryonic Stem) out of what was destined to be tumor cells. Sox2 confers pluripotency and you’ve got what you wanted.Now, we just have to hand pick the right cells from the petridish. Scientists can do it either by looking for Fbx15 expression or the expression of nanog in the treated sample. Both Fbx15 and Nanog are targets of Oct3/4 and Sox2; but Nanog is found to be more closely associated with pluripotency, as is evidenced by adult chimera formation (chimera is a monstrous fire breathing creature like dragon of ancient mythology).There have been some important modifications. Researchers have shown that one could still get human induced pluripotent stem cells (iPSC) without the need of the c-myc oncogene. The mode of delivery of these four factors could also be undertaken by plasmids, rather than the traditional retroviral vector approach. Retroviruses (like c-Myc) could potentially induce cancer. You may like to hear this Nature Podcast where both Yamanaka and Rudolph Jaenisch give a very good summary. As a bonus, you may also appreciate another way of creating iPSC. Replace the genome in “early embryonic cells” or zygotes (fertilized eggs) during cell division. During cell division, the nuclear membrane disappears and the factors are no longer in the nucleus. They are in the cytoplasm. Dieter Egli explains that if you replaced the genome of this zygote with another (genome) while the cell was still dividing, the new genome would adapt to the new cytosolic environment and get instructions from the factors in the cytosol. It will go ‘back in time’ and become a stem cell.Now, a bit of refreshment. Watch this awe inspiring Metallica video called 'All nightmare long'. It portrays the Tunguska event, A-bomb, Soviet Revolution, American supremacy (?) and ‘revival of organisms’. Some key phrases are “like a split worm, a part of the organism can reconstitute the whole”. Check about Planarians, they do reconstitute! “Instead of offspring, they become skin cells, nerves and muscle”- just as we described! Seems Metallica is well informed. Do see this wonderful video in YouTube.Last modified: neverReference: hyper-links andOkita, K., Ichisaka, T., & Yamanaka, S. (2007). Generation of germline-competent induced pluripotent stem cells Nature, 448 (7151), 313-317 DOI: 10.1038/nature05934Developmental reprogramming after chromosome transfer into mitotic mouse zygotes, doi:10.1038/nature05879... Read more »
Okita, K., Ichisaka, T., & Yamanaka, S. (2007) Generation of germline-competent induced pluripotent stem cells. Nature, 448(7151), 313-317. DOI: 10.1038/nature05934
by Amiya in Physiology physics woven fine
Imagine a strong crowd, as you see in a Manchester United versus Liverpool football match and you wished to concentrate on a particular person. How would you do it? Make him wear a fluorescent shirt and dye his hair (don’t do it in the middle of the crowd, I can’t guarantee your safety).Purdue University researchers have been successful in focusing at the cell of interest among a background of equally noisy and boisterous biomolecules and other metabolically active cells. Currently, researchers use immunological techniques to create an antibody to a molecule and then visualize the ‘molecule of interest’ by tagging the antibody to a radioisotope or a fluorescent dye; and flow cytometry can sort out different types of cells.The Purdue University team used gold coated nanoparticles with an iron oxide core that was impregnated in the cell they wished to see. They then subjected the specimen to a periodically changing magnetic field. The superparamagnetic cores (superparamagnetic nanoparticles have no net magnetization, but an external magnetic field can magnetize them) responded by rotating as the magnetic field rotated around them. The rotation could be seen in the ‘near infra-red’ light spectrum, as the incident light bounced off (scattered) the specially designed arms of the gold nanostar as it revolved. The rate (rpm) of this gyromagnetic (gyros means to rotate) twinkling could be externally controlled by varying the rate of the externally applied field. You now could identify the cell by its characteristic ‘twinkling’ (lighthouse type) effect.I am tempted to go beyond what’s been achieved so far. Here I go. I guess you are all familiar what happens to the rotating ceiling fan blades when you turn on a fluorescent lamp. Don’t you see a momentary snapshot of the three blades (some have 4)? That’s what where stroboscope comes in. It consists of a Xenon lamp (ordinary fluorescent lamps could do, but incandescent lamps won’t work as the glowing filament takes time to extinguish) flashing at a controllable rate. The electronic circuitry may be had here.Suppose that the fan is revolving at 1200 RPM and it is not changing. Set your stroboscope to flash at this rate. You’ll ‘see’ that the fan blades are absolutely not moving, which is certainly not true! But be there any mechanical defect in the fan, it will stand out as the centrifugal force widens it (provided that the fault is more or less tangential to the axis of rotation). Here also we are looking at our object of interest, aren’t we?Now lets look what implication it might have in biological imaging. We now know that the gamma subunit of mitochondrial F type ATP Synthase ‘actually’ rotates when it is synthesizing ATP (reverse rotation occurs when ATP is hydrolyzed). There are other locomotive units within the cell as well. They comprise of actin and myosin based molecular motors. Could we study them using an externally adjustable stroboscope? The optical (electromagnetic) signals so obtained may then be similarly broken down into simpler trigonometric (sine and cosine) functions by Fourier analysis (Fourier transform) as was done in the ‘twinkling nanostars’ experiment. At least, we expect to get rid of some 'noise' and some good still photos. But if we wanted better resolution and used higher frequency (electromagnetic) for it, some extraneous error will be introduced. It's a trade-off!Last modified: neverReference: hyper-links, unless specifically mentionedPrinciples of Biochemistry, Lehninger, 4th edhttp://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/ATP_synthaseWei, Q., Song, H., Leonov, A., Hale, J., Oh, D., Ong, Q., Ritchie, K., & Wei, A. (2009). Gyromagnetic Imaging: Dynamic Optical Contrast Using Gold Nanostars with Magnetic Cores Journal of the American Chemical Society, 131 (28), 9728-9734 DOI: 10.1021/ja901562j... Read more »
Wei, Q., Song, H., Leonov, A., Hale, J., Oh, D., Ong, Q., Ritchie, K., & Wei, A. (2009) Gyromagnetic Imaging: Dynamic Optical Contrast Using Gold Nanostars with Magnetic Cores. Journal of the American Chemical Society, 131(28), 9728-9734. DOI: 10.1021/ja901562j
by Amiya in Physiology physics woven fine
In today’s industrialized society we are constantly exposed to work related stresses. Consequently, anxiety and insomnia (sleeplessness) have become quite common. No wonder, we are using anxiolytics and sedatives more often; to get relief from the anxiety and insomnia respectively.Benzodiazepines such as diazepam (Valium), chlordiazepoxide (Librium) can effectively treat anxiety and insomnia. They do so by binding with a receptor (called Benzodiazepine-GABAa-chloride ion channel complex [henceforth to be referred to simply as GABAa receptor]) in nerve cell membranes. It is known that most drugs (medicines) exert their actions by combining with receptors: macromolecular complexes present in the cell membrane or within the cytosol or the nucleus.The GABAa receptor is a very versatile receptor complex (a hypothetical model is shown at the bottom). Its main action is to inhibit transmission along neurons in which they are present. Normally, proper functioning of the brain is ensured by a balance between the action of excitatory and inhibitory neurotransmitters [henceforth to be referred to simply as NTs]. Simply put, excitatory NTs (for example, glutamate) give a green or go signal; while inhibitory NTs (such as GABA) tell the nerve not to fire (red or stop signal). In this connection, it must be said that GABA (gamma amino butyric acid) is the most important inhibitory NT. When GABA binds with the GABA receptor ionophore complex, the receptor changes shape (conformation); and then a centrally located chloride channel, that is a part of the receptor itself, opens. Since the concentration of the chloride ions (Cl-) is much more on the outside of the cell than on the inside, Cl- now rushes in due to the increase in chloride conductance. The cell voltage goes further down and the interior of the cell becomes more negative (hyperpolarized) with respect to the outside. The cell becomes less excitable and is thus inhibited.Apart from maintaining the much needed critical balance already mentioned, they also ensure that the brain works in a relatively noise free environment. Billions of neuronal units are always firing in the background creating a constant ‘noise’. A constant release of GABA by the brain drowns out this noise thus improving the ‘signal to noise’ ratio, making the brain’s task of finding the proverbial ‘needle in a haystack’ a lot easier.The GABAa receptor not only binds with GABA, but it is a binding site for various other ligands. But before we discuss them, let us briefly analyze its structure first. The receptor has a pentameric structure which means that it consists of five subunits, and each subunit has four membrane-spanning (transmembrane) domains (see picture). And there are many of the polypeptide subunits to choose from a vast array consisting of alpha, beta, gamma, delta, pi, rho and so on. (In addition, there are six different forms of alpha, 4 beta and 3 gamma subunits). Thus, it’s no wonder that a great variety of GABAa receptors will be found, given the possible permutations!This receptor heterogeneity explains actions of various pharmaceuticals on the receptor. One major form of GABAa receptor (found throughout the brain) consists of two alpha1, two beta2 and one gamma2 subunits. In this isoform, GABA ‘somewhere’ between alpha1 and beta2 subunits, and benzodiazepines bind with the BZ1 (also called omega1) pockets located between alpha1 and gamma2 subunits. Benzodiazepines act only when the receptor isoform has one of the following alpha subunits: 1, 2, 3 or 5 and the subunit should have a conserved histidine residue in the N-terminal domain. In ‘knock-in’ mice where histidine has been replaced by arginine in the alpha1 subunit (alpha1H101R; H for histidine and R for arginine in the 101st residue of alpha1 subunit) there was no sedation or amnesia (as evidenced by their unchanged ‘energy’ and memory to electric shocks). It may be mentioned at this moment that the so called ‘date rape’ pills exploit the amnestic properties of benzodiazepines. The drug plays tricks with the victims’ memories. However, the anxiolytic and muscle relaxant properties were retained in these mice.These mice also do not respond to the hypnotic effects of zolpidem and zaleplon, non-benzodiazepines that act at GABAa receptors containing alpha1 subunits. But in mice with selective histidine arginine mutation in the alpha2 subunit of GABAa receptors, resistance to the antianxiety action of benzodiazepines has been seen. Based on these observations, it is thought that alpha1 subunit mediates sedative and amnestic effects, while alpha2 takes care of the anxiolytic and muscle relaxant ones. It also seems that we are poised to make better benzodiazepines in future (like one that works in anxiety but doesn’t wreak the patients’ memory).Lastly, the versatility. The GABAa receptor also binds barbiturates (urea derivatives used as anesthetics, anticonvulsants, Marilyn Monroe supposedly died of its overdose) in addition to the benzos. Alcohol, alphaxolone (a steroid anesthetic), etomidate (a short acting anesthetic), propofol (diprivan, Michael Jackson supposedly used it), volatile anesthetics like halothane, anticonvulsants like gabapentin and vigabatrin, anthelminthics like ivermectin, and neurosteroids (metabolites of androgen and progesterone) exert part or all of their actions by acting through this receptor, thereby hyperpolarizing the neuron. Conversely, convulsants picrotoxin blocks the chloride channel directly, while bicuculline blocks the receptor’s GABAa binding site causing depolarization and convulsion. There's a lot more than this mere exegesis, and I hope to discuss about it furher later.Last modified: neverReference: Bertram G. Katzung, Basic and Clinical Pharmacology, ninth editionPharmacology: Rang, Dale, Ritter, MooreWisden, W., & Stephens, D. (1999). Pharmacology: Towards better benzodiazepines Nature, 401 (6755), 751-752 DOI: 10.1038/44482... Read more »
Wisden, W., & Stephens, D. (1999) Pharmacology: Towards better benzodiazepines. Nature, 401(6755), 751-752. DOI: 10.1038/44482
by Amiya in Physiology physics woven fine
Wouldn't it be nice if we mapped how the thought processes traveled across our brain, in real time? That's exactly what Mazahir Hasan et al of Max Planck Institute for Medical Research in Heidelberg, have enabled us to view, when an action potential (AP) is underway in the central nervous system (CNS). The researchers introduced fluorescent calcium indicator proteins (FCIP) into the brain cells of mice by means of viral gene vectors. Each time an AP was underway, a lot of ionic phenomena happened. For example, the fast Sodium channels (Na+) opened (letting positive charges to the interior of the cell) leading to depolarization, Potassium (K+) channels opened (to bring back the resting membrane potential to normal, since K+ egress out of the cells) and so on.Next , the impulse is transmitted to the post-synaptic neuron through the agency of neurotransmitters. But, for this 'coupling' between the presynaptic and postsynaptic neurons to occur; Calcium ion (Ca++) levels in the synaptic knobs of the presynaptic neurons must rise for effective degranulation of the presynaptic vesicles. And that's precisely these researchers were banking upon.Just before the degranulation of synaptic vesicles begins; calcium ion concentration surges. Such short calcium currents peak within milliseconds, making them the appropriate ions for studying fast neuronal activity. Previously scientists had measured such currents by using microelectrodes implanted within the brain; but this method was quite unsuitable in studying moving animals or for a longer time period. So, they went on to produce stable transgenic mouse lines responding to functional calcium indicators; (including 'inverse pericam' and 'camgaroo-2') using viral vectors. These transgenic mouse lines were under TET inducible promoter (tetracycline, a broad-spectrum antibiotic) control. The TET system offered the advantage of targeting combination of different neuronal cell assemblies. The other side of the Ptetbi (bidirectional promoter tetracycline) promoter was attached to the firefly luciferase gene. They were also sensitive to doxicline (another antibiotic belonging to the same category as tetracycline) in terms of regulation of luciferase, as well.They then used a heteromeric sensor protein called D3cpv, which was made to produce in the nerve cells of the transgenic mice. Two subunits of this protein reacted to the binding of calcium ions in a way that when the yellow-fluorescent protein (YFP) lit up and the cyan-fluorescent protein (CFP) intensity diminished. When calcium was bound to the D3cpv complex; CFP (cyan fluorescent protein) and YFP (yellow fluorescent protein) came closer together bringing about FRET, in such a way that there was a visible color change, 'visually' or optically indicating the progression of action potential in real time. CFP and YFP are spectral variants of GFP linked together by a Ca++ sensitive linker.They used 'two-photon imaging microscopy' to study this phenomenon. They excited thinned out rat skulls using two-photons simultaneously using 'mode-locked' Titanium-sapphire laser. They then amplified the signal using photomultipliers and analyzed them.The resolution of the experiment was limited to less than 1 Hz (frequency of action potentials). They conferred that human thought processes might be mapped in much the same 'opto-physiologic way', in contrast to the usual electrophysiologic approach. Not only does the experiment throw light on the thought processes in real-time, but also, it is expected that it will be useful in the pathophysiology and treatment of Alzheimer's disease, Parkinson's disease and Huntington's chorea.FCIP-positive cells were found in the hippocampal CA1 and CA3 regions, mossy fiber areas of the dentate gyrus, neocortical pyramidal cells and olfactory receptor neurons, they remarked. They studied cortical pyramidal cell, olfactory and optical responses in the mice in their experiment.Hasan, M., Friedrich, R., Euler, T., Larkum, M., Giese, G., Both, M., Duebel, J., Waters, J., Bujard, H., Griesbeck, O., Tsien, R., Nagai, T., Miyawaki, A., & Denk, W. (2004). Functional Fluorescent Ca2+ Indicator Proteins in Transgenic Mice under TET Control PLoS Biology, 2 (6) DOI: 10.1371/journal.pbio.0020163Last modified: neverReference: Damian J Wallace, Stephan Meyer zum Alten Borgloh, Simone Astori, Ying Yang, Melanie Bausen, Sebastian Kügler, Amy E Palmer, Roger Y Tsien, Rolf Sprengel, Jason N D Kerr, Winfried Denk & Mazahir T Hasan. doi:10.1038/nmeth.1242... Read more »
Hasan, M., Friedrich, R., Euler, T., Larkum, M., Giese, G., Both, M., Duebel, J., Waters, J., Bujard, H., Griesbeck, O.... (2004) Functional Fluorescent Ca2 Indicator Proteins in Transgenic Mice under TET Control. PLoS Biology, 2(6). DOI: 10.1371/journal.pbio.0020163
by Amiya in Physiology physics woven fine
During the 80's, I listened to heavy metal bands like Iron Maiden and Metallica, although I couldn't follow their lyrics always. What used to captivate me in awe was how the guitarists synchronized themselves together so well. It apparently seemed as if only one guitar was playing in the background, which on closer scrutiny revealed the actual truth: it was really a duet. It is only now that scientists are beginning to find the secret behind this 'time and phase synchrony'.Scientists at the Max Planck Institute for Human Development in Berlin, have shown that musicians playing the same tune have their brains 'coupled' together. They started off experimenting with 8 such musician pairs. They first recorded the brain activity of each'duetter' by taking their electroencephalographic recordings (EEG). The musicians kept the EEG set-up atop their heads throughout the experiment.After taking the baseline EEG recordings, the researchers then made the guitarists to listen to metronome beats. Metronome beats are beats of sound that occur periodically and are used to keep track of time. They found that the EEG activities of the players were synchronized to that of the metronome beats. Next, the lead guitarist of the pair had to tap his guitar in a gesture to signal his partner as to when and at what speed they would begin. At this point, the researchers looked at the brainwaves of the guitarists again and found that the EEG of both the guitarists were in synchrony to each other (and no longer to the metronome beats). Curiously, this happened even before the actual performance began. This oscillatory synchronization was found to be especially stronger at the frontal and central electrode sites (of the EEG leads). This may indicate simultaneous firing of the motor and somatosensory neurons.This experiment also throws light as to how empathy and the 'mirror neuron network' might be working. These inter-personally coordinated behaviors will only result if they happen fast and both the sensory and the motor actions are coordinated. Certainly, there has to be some kind of a feedback between the pair for effective harmonization to occur.It has been previously seen that in addition to the EEG coupling; magnetoencephalography (MEG; measures the magnetic field around the skull) and electromyography (EMG: measures the muscle activity) related well between neuronal activity of a person to the voluntary activity of the same person. The new finding may help us probe the basis of social interaction but it also poses a question: how do the performers synchronize and through which media? You can find videos of duetting guitarists and the corresponding EEG recordings at Biomedcentral.Lindenberger, U., Li, S., Gruber, W., & Müller, V. (2009). Brains swinging in concert: cortical phase synchronization while playing guitar BMC Neuroscience, 10 (1) DOI: 10.1186/1471-2202-10-22 Last modified: neverReference: hyper-links, unless specifically mentioned... Read more »
Lindenberger, U., Li, S., Gruber, W., & Müller, V. (2009) Brains swinging in concert: cortical phase synchronization while playing guitar. BMC Neuroscience, 10(1), 22. DOI: 10.1186/1471-2202-10-22
by Amiya in Physiology physics woven fine
Noise is something we dislike, because by definition, noise means unwanted sound. But this definition is subjective, for what is music to my ears (say the heavy metal band Metallica) is noise to most people. In fact Iraqi prisoners were forced to listen to Metallica songs as a means of torture (culture shock and noise) by the American soldiers. Perhaps a better definition is, wrong sound at the wrong place at the wrong time.Apart from acoustic noise; there is visual noise as found in television as ‘snow’, electronic noise (e.g. thermal noise or Johnson noise), cosmic noise and so on. Speaking of acoustic noise, one can’t help but think about the dreaded ‘noise pollution’ that seems to envelop us all. In addition to the nuisance it poses, it also causes anxiety, insomnia, increased blood pressure (hypertension), deafness and a hell lot of other bad things. So, it seems that noise is all bad. It’s not always so!There is a disease called otosclerosis. In this disease, the footplate of stapes (a small bone in the middle ear) gets fixed to the oval window of the internal ear, producing conductive deafness. The patient can not hear normally as the ossicular (bony) conducting chain is at fault. But surprisingly, such persons hear well in noisy places (market, railway station). This phenomenon called Paracusis Willisii is said to occur due to the fact that one has to speak out real loud (over and above the background noise) in such places; thus making this loud voice cross the patients’ threshold of hearing. However, it may also be possible that the amplitude of the voice (in decibel) might ‘ride’ (summate) on the background noise amplitude, and this combined sound amplitude is heard by the ears. The brain then does some kind of fuzzy logic (or acts as a differential amplifier); and the ‘information’ is decoded. So, it seems that noise isn’t all that bad.In ‘information theory’ even noise is said to contain information in it. One fine example that illustrates how visual noise might contain information is random dot stereography (and autostereogram). So, noise could be meaningful.In diabetes mellitus, a very common disease across the globe, the blood glucose level rises. This and other metabolic products causes a condition called diabetic neuropathy, among other things. The person’s sense of touch is diminished and this results in inattention to sustained pressure(causes decreased circulation) or trauma to the affected area. This, along with the increased blood glucose and infection may then cause gangrene of the limb which might require an amputation of that limb. Cloutier et al have resorted to noise in an attempt to address the issue.They applied mechanical noise directly over sensory neurons and have found that both vibration and tactile perception in these patients improved. This mechanical noise was christened as ‘stochastic resonance’ (stochastic means random or probabilistic; this particular term is coined since the frequencies are not tuned to match any particular frequency), and was applied at an imperceptible level. They applied this noise to the great toe of some of the affected individuals, while the controls received none (i.e. no SR). The effect was studied by measuring the vibration perception threshold (VPT). VPT was significantly lower in patients receiving SR compared to the controls (no SR). As the threshold was low, the patients’ sensitivity to detect vibration and tactile sensation improved. They hoped that a continually vibrating shoe insert could improve nerve function in these cases.In another instance, Toshio Mori and Shoichi Kai of the University of Kyushu, Japan, showed that noise might improve brain function. They shone periodic signals (of 5 Hz flicker) onto the right eyelids and noisy signals onto the left eyelids of the subjects when they were at rest, and measured the intensity of their brain waves. Brain waves are electrical signals that occur in the brain due to the firing of neurons and are detected by electroencephalography (EEG). They found a sharp peak at 5 Hz, the frequency of the periodic varying signal. As they increased the strength of the noise signal relative to the periodic signal, a ‘harmonic’ peak emerged in the alpha wave band at 10 Hz. As the noise signal gained strength, this peak first increased and then diminished. The researchers believe that this harmonic peak is indicative of stochastic resonance in the cerebral visual cortex. Stochastic because of the non-linear way the brainwave behaves in response to the external stimulus. They argue that naturally occurring background electrical noise in the brain (from electron transport chains, neuronal activities) may play important roles in cognition and behavior.However, not everything about noise is healthy as researchers from the University of California at San Francisco, USA suggest. They exposed healthy young rats to ‘white noise’, (random audio frequencies covering the full spectrum with randomly assigned amplitudes) and found that the development of their auditory cortex was delayed. They used electrophysiology tools to explore this. They also suspected that everyday environmental noise, also a type of white noise, could harm children by interfering with language acquisition and speech.The question is: should we scold our children when they continue with those awful noises? I am confused. But one more thing; it was this noise (in the microwave spectrum) that gave scientists the experimental proof that the Universe was expanding.Last modified: neverReference: Prolonged Mechanical Noise Restores Tactile Sense in Diabetic Neuropathic Patients.Cloutier R, Horr S, Niemi JB, D' Andrea S, Lima C, Harry JD, Veves A.Int J Low Extrem Wounds. 2009 Jan 6.Noisy signals strengthen human brainwavesT Mori and S Kai 2002 Phys. Rev. Lett. 88 218101White Noise Delays Auditory Organization in the BrainNoise, WikipediaMori, T., & Kai, S. (2002). Noise-Induced Entrainment and Stochastic Resonance in Human Brain Waves Physical Review Letters, 88 (21) DOI: 10.1103/PhysRevLett.88.218101... Read more »
Mori, T., & Kai, S. (2002) Noise-Induced Entrainment and Stochastic Resonance in Human Brain Waves. Physical Review Letters, 88(21). DOI: 10.1103/PhysRevLett.88.218101
by Amiya in Physiology physics woven fine
In our bodies there are clocks in addition to the Master clock located in the suprachiasmatic nucleus. In computers, there are multiple clocks too, and they are tightly coordinated. For example, Integrated circuits like AV 9155 generate multiple clock frequencies for different portions of a computer (e.g. bus clock, CPU clock, keyboard clock etc.). All these clock frequencies are well regulated, since ICs like AV9155 use 2 quartz crystals (14.318 MHz) which generates of all these frequencies (they have inbuilt circuitry for dividing/multiplying these frequencies to create other necessary frequencies).Our bodies have their own version of these ‘crystal oscillators’, the BMAL1/CLOCK heterodimer. Since genes are present in all cells (leaving aside germ cells for a while, since they are haploid, and chiasma formation gives rise to gene rearrangement), theoretically all cells also has the machinery for BMAL/CLOCK generation. Thus in the periphery, where these genes are expressed, circadian oscillating mechanisms are automatically incorporated.The role of peripheral circadian clocks is still uncertain. But it is known that the peripheral clocks regulate cell division, estrous cycles and glucose and lipid homeostasis. Lamia et al knocked out the BMAL1 gene in mice liver and observed that the liver was no longer able to pour sufficient glucose into the blood circulation for cellular activity, resulting in hypoglycemia. Normally, the liver produces glucose from lipids and amino acids in a process called neoglucogenesis; and from glycogen, a glucose polymer, by glycogenolysis, in the fasting phase, to make up for the dwindling blood glucose level. In liver specific BMAL1 deletion, this did not happen and the animal suffered from hypoglycemia, indicating the important role of the liver peripheral clock.These peripheral clocks certainly need to be regulated too in order to achieve physiological harmony. The master clock in the suprachiasmatic nucleus might regulate these peripheral clocks by hormones and hemodynamic cues.Gatfield et al used two groups of mice and inactivated BMAL1 in all their cells in one group (BMAL1-/-); and only in liver cells in the other group (L-BMAL1-/-) [the 2 minus signs indicate homozygous, or in both alleles, deletion/inactivation]. The mice in which all BMAL1 were deleted did not show any problem which glucose homeostasis, whereas those with only liver specific BMAL1 deletion had problem maintaining normal sugar level in the inactivity (fasting) phase. Thus the role of liver clock is undeniable. The hepatic oscillator synchronises on feeding cues, since feeding is related to circadian metabolism. In the L-BMAL1 knockout mice, both neoglucogenesis and glycogenolysis operated adequately, but the machinery for the pouring of glucose into the circulation, the final step that is carried out by glucose transporter 2 (GLUT2) is suboptimal. GLUT2 expression in L-BMAL1-/- rats is inadequate.In BMAL1-/- mice, the master clock in the SCN was inactive along with all other peripheral clocks. This presumably abolished the circadian feeding responses and thus glucose homeostasis was minimally affected. It is as if both the SCN (master) and liver (slave) clocks gone wrong and they were fully asynchronous. But in the L-BMAL1 knockout mice, the SCN was OK and it expected the desired blood glucose level in the habitual feeding time, but the liver lacked GLUT2 to supply the required glucose in the bloodstream. UNITED WE STAND, we better synch!Last modified: neverReferences:Physiological significance of a peripheral tissue circadian clock. Katja A. Lamia, Kai-Florian Storch, and Charles J. Weitz doi:10.1073/pnas.0806717105BMAL1 and CLOCK, Two Essential Components of the Circadian Clock, Are Involved inGlucose Homeostasis. R. Daniel Rudic , Peter McNamara , Anne-Maria Curtis, Raymond C. Boston, Satchidananda Panda, John B. Hogenesch, Garret A. FitzGerald doi:10.1371/journal.pbio.0020377D. Gatfield, U. Schibler (2008). Circadian glucose homeostasis requires compensatory interference between brain and liver clocks Proceedings of the National Academy of Sciences, 105 (39), 14753-14754 DOI: 10.1073/pnas.0807861105... Read more »
D. Gatfield, & U. Schibler. (2008) Circadian glucose homeostasis requires compensatory interference between brain and liver clocks. Proceedings of the National Academy of Sciences, 105(39), 14753-14754. DOI: 10.1073/pnas.0807861105
by Amiya in Physiology physics woven fine
In our bodies there are clocks in addition to the Master clock located in the suprachiasmatic nucleus. In computers, there are multiple clocks too, and they are tightly coordinated. For example,...
[[ This is a content summary only. Visit my website for full links, other content, and more! ]]... Read more »
D. Gatfield, & U. Schibler. (2008) Circadian glucose homeostasis requires compensatory interference between brain and liver clocks. Proceedings of the National Academy of Sciences, 105(39), 14753-14754. DOI: 10.1073/pnas.0807861105
by Amiya in Physiology physics woven fine
We are quite adept in solving numerical problems in our everyday ‘analog world’ using decimal rules developed by us. Digital computers, on the other hand, calculate using binary or Boolean (0, 1) rules, and then convert the result in decimal format with the help of dedicated binary to decimal converter ICs. In the molecular world, calculations ‘happen’ in a strange way.Take for example the case of Fluorescent Resonant Energy Transfer or FRET. Also known as Forster Resonant Energy Transfer, this phenomenon is characterized by the emission of a photon of one frequency (upon stimulation) which, in turn, activates an acceptor molecule to emit a photon of another wavelength. There’s one clause that says that the first photon (from the donor molecule) will only be emitted when it can definitively be coupled with the ‘acceptor’. But in the first place, how is this ‘virtual photon’ to know whether its bride was waiting or not when it hasn’t even visited her? Yet FRET doesn’t fret, and the process goes on.All plants use chlorophyll to trap sunlight and convert it to chemical energy in the form of carbohydrates by photosynthesis. The efficiency approximates 100%. The predominant classical approach was that the photons hopped from light capturing pigment biomolecules to the ultimate reaction center where the actual conversion was taking place. But this ‘first choose and then pick’ approach that classical physics suggested would mean considerable loss of energy as heat, as photons wasted time as they hopped down the energy ladder. Quantum mechanics bypassed this by allowing simultaneous sampling of all energy states at one go by its unique properties of ‘superposition’ and ‘entanglement’. Graham Fleming and researchers at Lawrence Berkeley National Laboratory and the University of California at Berkeley showed the existence of a process of ‘quantum beating’, (a phenomenon akin to 'heterodyning’ in radio sets that is used to obtain intermediate frequencies for amplification) occurred which allowed sampling of all energy states by interference of the propagating wave. They used two-dimensional electronic spectroscopy in order to probe the sequence of events that occurred.That the RBCs (erythrocytes), actomyosin complexes use quantum mechanics for system optimization has been established. Cellular respiration in the mitochondria, DNA, and the brain too might exploit quantum computing.Counting without disturbing the molecule may be achieved by quantum mechanics, for it allows a molecule to know as if ‘intuitively’, the state of another molecule placed at a distance. Erwin Schrödinger, in his book 'What is Life?', opined that biological systems could be using the principles of quantum theory to maintain biological order. Sir Roger Penrose along with Stuart Hamerhoff proposed that the brain could be working as a quantum computer. In reaction to this, Max Tegmark showed that environmentally induced decoherence would foil any quantum interaction taking place. But Tegmark assumed the average kinetic energy (temperature) of the brain as 310 K (273+37). While this is true in a macroscopic world, Koichiro Matsuno has shown, using black body radiation measurements, that actomyosin complexes which are abundant in the axons of nerve cells, can reach local temperatures as low as 1.6*10-3K. It is as if nature has evolved ways to ensure decoherence free subspaces where entanglement and quantum interaction were possible. Stephen Hawking in his book 'A Brief History of Time' observed that quantum mechanics was the basis of modern biology and chemistry and the only area where quantum mechanics was not properly integrated were gravity and the large-scale structure of the universe (page 60).To quote Ogryzko "Indeed, if it has taken Humankind only few decades to approach the use of entanglement in quantum information technology, one can wonder why Life, in billions of years of evolution, could not also learn to take advantage, finding in entanglement an alternative resource for stabilizing biological order." It seems we need an entirely different approach if we wanted to probe the mysteries of life and quantum theory is poised to help us in this regard.Last modified: neverReferences:Quantum BiologyVasily V Ogryzko (2008). Erwin Schroedinger, Francis Crick and epigenetic stability Biology Direct, 3 (1) DOI: 10.1186/1745-6150-3-15... Read more »
Vasily V Ogryzko. (2008) Erwin Schroedinger, Francis Crick and epigenetic stability. Biology Direct, 3(1), 15. DOI: 10.1186/1745-6150-3-15
by Amiya in Physiology physics woven fine
The principles of generation of EEG waves in the brain are still ill understood. Although the general mechanism of cortical dipoles and thalamocortical oscillations behind the generation holds true; there has been speculations that the alpha waves could actually be originating in the heart- the cardiac electromechanical hypothesis, which states that the arterial pulse ‘shocks’ the skull-brain mass (and interacts electrically and mechanically) to oscillate at its naturally resonant frequency of approximately 10 Hz.Now, Kramer et al propose that beta 1 rhythm could be the result of a process called period concatenation (concatenation means chain forming or serial addition). Beta rhythms (18-30 Hz) were thought to be harmonics (integer multiples of the fundamental frequency) of alpha rhythms (8-12 Hz). Kramer et al observed that application of 400 nanomolar kainate to rat somatosensory cortex produced gamma rhythm in the superficial cortical layers and beta2 rhythms in the deep cortical layers.They observed that after an initial interval of simultaneous gamma (~25 ms period) and beta2 (~40 ms period) rhythms in the superficial and deep cortical layers respectively, a resultant, synchronous beta1 (~65 ms period) rhythm in all cortical layers occurred. They concluded that the time period (the inverse of frequency, or 1/f) of gamma wave (25ms) concatenated with that of beta2 (40ms), to form the time period of 65 ms (40+25). That was the time period of the beta1 rhythm, which resulted as a consequence of this concatenation. They concluded that neural activity in the superficial and deep cortical layers of the brain could combine over time to generate a slower oscillation.Frequency synthesis would, naturally, have both energy and space saving implications for the system concerned. That the brain economizes is not new in computational biology and electronics. For example, in the simplest and realistic model of the 40 Hz gamma rhythm, only 2 neurons (one excitatory and the other inhibitory) interconnected by reciprocal paths are required. The excitatory neuron will ‘charge’ the inhibitory neuron. The inhibitory neuron will suppress (inhibit) the activity of the excitatory neuron as a result, and any oscillation will be dampened. Hence, a decay in the inhibitory synapse will not inhibit the excitatory neuron anymore and thus cause oscillation; and clearly, the frequency of rhythm will depend on the decay time. This “gamma-motif” resembles a lot with the ‘flip-flop’ circuits in digital electronics.Its not surprising that the human brain which had evolved as a result of nature’s selection process will learn to compute things so that the metabolic costs of additional neural pacemakers were curtailed to the bare minimum.Last modified: neverReferences: Mark A. Kramer, Anita K. Roopun, Lucy M. Carracedo, Roger D. Traub, Miles A. Whittington, Nancy J. Kopell (2008). Rhythm Generation through Period Concatenation in Rat Somatosensory Cortex PLoS Computational Biology, 4 (9) DOI: 10.1371/journal.pcbi.1000169A Cardiac Hypothesis for the Origin of EEG AlphaCastillo, Horace T. Digital Object Identifier: 10.1109/TBME.1983.325080... Read more »
Mark A. Kramer, Anita K. Roopun, Lucy M. Carracedo, Roger D. Traub, Miles A. Whittington, & Nancy J. Kopell. (2008) Rhythm Generation through Period Concatenation in Rat Somatosensory Cortex. PLoS Computational Biology, 4(9). DOI: 10.1371/journal.pcbi.1000169
by Amiya in Physiology physics woven fine
An empty brain is the devil’s workshop, goes the proverb. Actually, the brain is never empty. Even in our deepest slumber, the brain continues to weave waves of electrical rhythms that can be seen with the aid of electroencephalogram or EEG. When we place electrodes on the scalp or on the cortex (inside the skull), and amplify the faint signals via bioinstrumentation amplifier, we can lay our hands on these fluctuating rhythms. (More on the electronics of EEG may be found at the OpenEEG project site).We have as many as 100 billion neurons in the brain. In the superficial layers of the cortex, the neurons have numerous dendrites branching out from the soma or cell body (shown in grey oval in this picture).These neurons have been compared to a forest of trees where the branches are the dendrites and the trunk the axon. These dendrites make extensive connections among each other. They also get connections from the axon collaterals of neighboring axons (i.e. the 'trunks' of other trees connect to these 'twigs' by offshoot from the trunks). Since there are a lot of axons converging on the dendrites of each neuron, and given the fact that these axons can be excitatory (red) or inhibitory (green) depending on the neurotransmitter, the sum of input may be either negative or positive (with respect to the cell body). Thus an alternating current (cortical dipole) will flow between the shifting dendrites and the soma. This along with thalamocortical oscillations produces the EEG waves.The brain doesn’t churn out the rhythm just like that. Had the neurons fired randomly the oscillations would have cancelled out.EEG waves occur due to synchronous discharge of neurons producing the alpha, beta, theta, gamma and other telltale waves. Like all other electrical waves, they too have a frequency and amplitude. Alpha waves, for example, have a frequency of 8-12 Hz (cycles per second) and an amplitude ranging from 50-100 microvolt when recorded from the scalp, and it is found when a person is resting comfortably with eyes closed and the mind wandering. On the other hand, gamma rhythm has a frequency of 30-80 Hz, and it is found when a person is deeply engrossed on some work.It was known for a long time that the hippocampus exerted a role in learning by fostering long term potentiation (LTP) by aligning the neocortex, where memories are stored. The mechanisms behind this are now emerging. Sirota et al and Siapas et al have analyzed rat brains and found out that there were many localized gamma oscillators within the brain that gave rise to neocortical gamma bursts. These oscillators had varying frequencies but they phase aligned themselves with the arrival of hippocampal theta waves. A large fraction of pyramidal cells and interneurons too were phase aligned to the hippocampal theta rhythm.This is similar to a bar magnet aligning iron dust or other ferromagnetic materials by virtue of its magnetic field. Apart from the cerebral cortex, the cerebellar cortex and the hippocampus too can generate brain waves. Such a mechanism may explain the orchestration of many parts of the cortex (and hence the memory engrams they contain); and data synchronization and downloading to the hippocampus for memory retrieval. It also shows how hippocampus does the ‘indexing’ of cortical contents. These experiments throw light on neuronal plasticity and information flow, and may be someday they could help clinicians in fighting memory loss as it occurs in neurodegenerative diseases like Alzheimer’s disease.Last modified: neverReferences:Prefrontal Phase Locking to Hippocampal Theta OscillationsAthanassios G. Siapas, Evgueniy V. Lubenov and Matthew A. Wilson. doi:10.1016/j.neuron.2005.02.028A SIROTA, S MONTGOMERY, S FUJISAWA, Y ISOMURA, M ZUGARO, G BUZSAKI (2008). Entrainment of Neocortical Neurons and Gamma Oscillations by the Hippocampal Theta Rhythm Neuron, 60 (4), 683-697 DOI: 10.1016/j.neuron.2008.09.014... Read more »
A SIROTA, S MONTGOMERY, S FUJISAWA, Y ISOMURA, M ZUGARO, & G BUZSAKI. (2008) Entrainment of Neocortical Neurons and Gamma Oscillations by the Hippocampal Theta Rhythm. Neuron, 60(4), 683-697. DOI: 10.1016/j.neuron.2008.09.014
by Amiya in Physiology physics woven fine
It would be nice if we could see an individual virus particle, a virion, in real time within a mammalian tissue starting from its attachment to the host cell and entry, to its assembly and budding and release. The dynamics of viral production has been studied using computational models by noting the response of the virus to exogenous administration of reverse transcriptase and protease inhibitors. It was noted that a mind boggling 10^10 to 10^11 virions are produced each day by using this mathematical model. Now, Jouvenet et al have been able to fluorescently label a molecule called Gag protein (for group specific antigen), the major structural component of HIV. With the aid of fluorescence resonance energy transfer (FRET) and other techniques on these fluorescently tagged virions in living cells, they have been able to see the biogenesis of HIV virions in real time; from viral assembly to release by budding. The assembly rate accelerated as the Gag protein accumulated inside the cells. Typically, the time required for the assembly was just 5-6 minutes.In fluorescence resonance energy transfer (FRET), an external light source shines on a donor fluorescent molecule. The donor molecule gets excited and emits light of a different frequency (fluorescence), which activate the acceptor molecule. The acceptor fluorophore then emits a photon of yet another wavelength (or a quantum, as we are referring to the particle nature of light here). Both donor and acceptor fluorophores are nothing but color variants of green fluorescent protein or GFP. The whole process (FRET) is noisy as the incident light messes up with the emitted light. The incident light may also activate the acceptor fluorophore directly, leading to error.Recently, Asokan et al used bioluminescence from Gaussia luciferase to study adeno associated virus (AAV) kinetics in living mammalian cells. By using bioluminescent molecules, the external light source as used in FRET was no longer needed. This way, direct activation of acceptor molecule was avoided and background noise was kept to a minimum. They first amplified gLuc (Gaussia luciferase) in a plasmid by polymerase chain reaction or PCR, using primer sequences. They then fused the resulting protein to that of an adenoviral subunit of AAV, called Vp2. The resulting gLuc/AAV construct was then injected into the left hind limb of rats. They could clearly notice the AAV vector dynamics. The importance of such dynamics is realized when the use of AAV as a vector in gene therapy is considered. They opined that such a technique would be ideal in studying viral dynamics in peripheral tissues such as the eye and the brain.Bioluminescence is used to study virus tropism and viral kinetics. Tropism refers to the different populations of host cells a virus can attack. Retroviruses have a narrow tropism meaning they can infect only a few types of cells such as CD4+ T cells and macrophages. Previous studies employed Gaussia luciferase reporter gene as a tool for studying viral dynamics. Recent experiments promise a better future for the study of viral behavior.References: A Asokan, J S Johnson, C Li, R J Samulski (2008). Bioluminescent virion shells: new tools for quantitation of AAV vector dynamics in cells and live animals Gene Therapy, 15 (24), 1618-1622 DOI: 10.1038/gt.2008.127Human Immunodeficiency Virus Disease: AIDS and Related Disorders: Anthony S. Fauci, H. Clifford Lane, Harrison’s Principles of Internal Medicine, 17th Ed.Imaging the biogenesis of individual HIV-1 virions in live cellsNolwenn Jouvenet, Paul D. Bieniasz, & Sanford M. SimonLast modified: never... Read more »
A Asokan, J S Johnson, C Li, & R J Samulski. (2008) Bioluminescent virion shells: new tools for quantitation of AAV vector dynamics in cells and live animals. Gene Therapy, 15(24), 1618-1622. DOI: 10.1038/gt.2008.127
by Amiya in Physiology physics woven fine
In the summer of 1981, the United States Centers for Disease Control and Prevention (CDC), reported occurrence of Pneumocystis jiroveci (previously known as P. carinii) pneumonia in five otherwise...
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Robert C Gallo. (2006) A reflection on HIV/AIDS research after 25 years. Retrovirology, 3(1), 72. DOI: 10.1186/1742-4690-3-72
by Amiya in Physiology physics woven fine
Ashanthi, a four year old girl, was suffering from an immune deficiency disorder called SCID (Severe Combined Immune Deficiency). Due to the lack of a healthy immune system, she was susceptible to...
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1. Mark A. Kay*,, 2. Dexi Liu, and, & 3. Peter M. Hoogerbrugge. (1997) Gene therapy . PNAS .
by Amiya in Physiology physics woven fine
In my childhood, I used to be fascinated by the mysterious glow of fireflies. Later I learned that it was due to a reaction between a substance called Luciferin and an enzyme, luciferase, a phenomenon called bioluminescence. This kind of glow is not limited to land creatures. Creatures living at the bottom of oceans too emit light.Osamu Shimomura of Japan was given the task of isolating the substance which let the marine mollusk Cipridina glow when it was crushed and mixed with water. He succeeded, and on the wings of his publication, was recruited by the Princeton University, in the United States. There he began studying Aequorea Victoria, a marine jellyfish which glowed green when agitated. The jellyfish had an umbrella like shape and its outer rim glowed green. He chopped off the outer edges, crushed it, and filtered it to obtain a ‘squeezate’. He noticed one day that the ‘squeezate’ glowed blue when he poured some into the sink. He understood that it was the calcium ions (Ca++) in the seawater present in the sink that made it glow blue. It was christened aequorin.During the extraction process they also chanced upon another protein called GFP, for green fluorescent protein. It glowed green when excited with ultraviolet light or light in the blue spectrum. The structure of GFP is barrel shaped (also likened to beer can shape), and consists of 238 amino acids. The chromophore or light emitting part is in the interior of the ‘beer can shaped’ molecule, in a region called the alpha helix region (of the molecule); while the exterior of the molecule was comprised of beta pleated sheets of the GFP molecule. Shimomura and colleagues showed that the blue color emitted by aequorin donor excited the GFP acceptor in an energy transfer process. The photons in the blue wavelength were absorbed by the GFP chromophore and photons of green wavelength were emitted - a phenomena called (bio)fluorescence. Fluorescence differs from luminescence from the fact that in fluorescence light of another wavelength is emitted than the one absorbed and luminescence means emission of light.The whole story struck a chord in Martin Chalfie’s ears. He thought what if he could harness the gene that codes for GFP and bind it to the segment that coded for a protein of interest? He worked with a roundworm, Caenorhabditis elegans, a simple organism with only 959 cells and yet a complete organism for it could procreate, had a brain and even one third of its genes were related to humans. It was translucent and hence studying its interior was easier. He contacted Douglas Prasher who was also hot in the trail for the GFP genes. Douglas Prasher did as he promised. He sent the GFP gene to Chalfie once he got hold of the gene. Chalfie introduced it behind the promoter of the gene that coded for proteins in C elegans’ touch receptor neurons. The neurons were cleanly delineated, that too in a live worm and ‘real-time’! GFP, being a natural gene product, is non toxic.Roger Tsien wanted more. He knew from earlier studies that the ‘chromophore’ had 3 key amino acids: serine, tyrosine and glycine in position 65, 66 and 67 respectively in the 238 amino acid long GFP molecule which formed the chromophore. He used DNA technology to alter the amino acid sequence so as to obtain GFP variants that would absorb and emit light in different part of the electromagnetic spectrum. This way he obtained cyan, yellow and blue. He obtained DsRED, a red GFP-like protein extracted from coral, from two Russian researchers and modified it so that it was stable and of desired molecular weight.It was all set by now. Researchers now modified mice genetically and introduced the gene for red, cyan and yellow GFP. They expressed the corresponding proteins in their brain and what we got is a riot of colors, the ‘brainbow’, short for brain and rainbow. Like the elementary colors, these colors when combined in different proportions, produce many colors, just as a color printer does using them (cyan, yellow and red). One could now visualize the neural circuitry in much the same way as seeing electronic circuits. Disease detection and progression in Alzheimer’s disease, cancer and Parkinson’s disease are some potential clinical applications. Watching biogenesis of HIV1 (the virus that causes AIDS) in live cells in real time is now an easy meat. GFP can also be engineered to recognize heavy metals like cadmium (a cancer causing chemical), explosives like TNT and Arsenic (a water pollutant causing Arsenicosis).Osamu Shimomura, Martin Chalfie and Roger Tsien were awarded the Nobel Prize in Chemistry, 2008. Sadly, Doug Prasher was left out, despite his outstanding contribution in this field. He is now driving a van at $10 an hour to meet his living expenses. He is not alone. This year’s Nobel in Physiology or Medicine too left out Robert Gallo, an HIV pioneer. So, not totally a happy ending.Last modified: neverReferences:The Nobel Prize in Chemistry 2008The Man Who Missed the Nobel PrizeStuart Cantrill (2008). Nobel Prize 2008: Green fluorescent protein Nature Chemistry DOI: 10.1038/nchem.75... Read more »
Stuart Cantrill. (2008) Nobel Prize 2008: Green fluorescent protein. Nature Chemistry. DOI: 10.1038/nchem.75
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