Astrocytes: The Unsung Heroes of Learning and Memory

Summary: Astrocytes, star-shaped glial cells in the brain, play a crucial role in learning and memory by regulating synaptic plasticity. Researchers developed a biophysical model showing how astrocytes interact with nerve cells to facilitate rapid adaptation to new information.

The study reveals that astrocyte dysfunction can significantly impair cognitive processes. This research bridges the gap between theoretical models of plasticity and experimental findings, offering new therapeutic possibilities targeting astrocytes to enhance cognitive functions.

Key Facts:

  1. Astrocytes regulate synaptic plasticity, essential for learning and memory.
  2. The biophysical model highlights astrocytes’ role in neurotransmitter D-serine regulation.
  3. Astrocyte dysfunction can lead to significant cognitive impairments.

Source: University of Bonn

Star-shaped glial cells, so-called astrocytes, are more than just a supporting cell of the brain. They are actively involved in learning processes and interact with nerve cells. But what exactly is it that astrocytes do?

Researchers at the University Hospital Bonn (UKB) and the University of Bonn are using a biophysical model to clarify how astrocytes interact with nerve cells to regulate rapid adaptation to new information.

The results of the study have now been published in Communications Biology.

This shows astrocytes.
By regulating levels of the neurotransmitter D-serine, astrocytes can facilitate the brain’s ability to efficiently adapt and rewire its synaptic connections. Credit: Neuroscience News

In the brain, synaptic plasticity—the ability to change neuronal connections over time—is fundamental to learning and memory. Traditionally, science has focused on nerve cells and their synapses. The discovery of intracellular Ca2+ signaling in astrocytes led to the idea that astrocytes are more than a glue holding the brain together and play a crucial role in this process.

“Astrocyte dysfunction can significantly impair our ability to learn, highlighting their importance in cognitive processes. However, the exact functions of astrocytes have long remained a mystery,” says corresponding and co-senior author Prof. Tatjana Tchumatchenko, research group leader at the UKB’s Institute for Experimental Epileptology and Cognition Research and member of the Transdisciplinary Research Area (TRA) “Modeling” at the University of Bonn.

Unraveling the intricate dance of cellular interactions during learning

“Our work as computational neuroscientists is to use the language of mathematics to interpret the experimental observations and build coherent models of the brain,” says co-senior author Dr. Pietro Verzelli, a postdoctoral fellow in Prof. Tchumatchenko’s group.

In this case, the researchers developed a biophysical model of learning based on a biochemical feedback loop between astrocytes and neurons recently discovered by Dr. Kirsten Bohmbach, Prof. Christian Henneberger and other researchers at the DZNE and UKB.

The biophysical model explains the learning deficits observed in mice with impaired astrocytic regulation and highlights the crucial role that astrocytes play in rapid adaptation to new information. By regulating levels of the neurotransmitter D-serine, astrocytes can facilitate the brain’s ability to efficiently adapt and rewire its synaptic connections.

“Our mathematical framework not only explains the experimental observations, but also provides new testable predictions about the learning process,” says first author Lorenzo Squadrani, a Ph.D. student in Tchumatchenko’s group.

This research bridges the gap between theoretical models of plasticity and experimental findings on the interactions between neurons and glial cells. It highlights astrocytic regulation as the physiological basis for dynamic synaptic adaptations, a central concept of synaptic plasticity.

“Our findings contribute to a better understanding of the molecular and cellular mechanisms underlying learning and memory and provide new opportunities for therapeutic interventions targeting astrocytes to improve cognitive functions,” says Prof. Tchumatchenko.

About this learning and memory research news

Author: Lorenzo Squadrani
Source: University of Bonn
Contact: Lorenzo Squadrani – University of Bonn
Image: The image is credited to Neuroscience News

Original Research: Open access.
Astrocytes enhance plasticity response during reversal learning” by Lorenzo Squadrani et al. Communications Biology


Abstract

Astrocytes enhance plasticity response during reversal learning

Astrocytes play a key role in the regulation of synaptic strength and are thought to orchestrate synaptic plasticity and memory. Yet, how specifically astrocytes and their neuroactive transmitters control learning and memory is currently an open question.

Recent experiments have uncovered an astrocyte-mediated feedback loop in CA1 pyramidal neurons which is started by the release of endocannabinoids by active neurons and closed by astrocytic regulation of the D-serine levels at the dendrites. D-serine is a co-agonist for the NMDA receptor regulating the strength and direction of synaptic plasticity.

Activity-dependent D-serine release mediated by astrocytes is therefore a candidate for mediating between long-term synaptic depression (LTD) and potentiation (LTP) during learning.

Here, we show that the mathematical description of this mechanism leads to a biophysical model of synaptic plasticity consistent with the phenomenological model known as the BCM model.

The resulting mathematical framework can explain the learning deficit observed in mice upon disruption of the D-serine regulatory mechanism. It shows that D-serine enhances plasticity during reversal learning, ensuring fast responses to changes in the external environment.

The model provides new testable predictions about the learning process, driving our understanding of the functional role of neuron-glia interaction in learning.

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