(Press-News.org) AUGUSTA, Ga. – A brain cell type found where habits are formed and movement is controlled has receptors that work like computer processors to translate regular activities into habits, researchers report.
"Habits, for better or worse, basically define who we are," said Dr. Joe Z. Tsien, Co-Director of the Brain & Behavior Discovery Institute at Georgia Health Sciences University. Habits also provide mental freedom and flexibility by enabling many activities to be on autopilot while the brain focuses on more urgent matters, he said.
Research published in the journal Neuron shows that NMDA receptors on dopamine neurons in the brain's basal ganglia are essential to habit formation. These receptors function like gateways to the brain cells, letting in electrically charged ions to increase the activity and communication of neurons. Their pivotal role reminds neuroscientist Dr. Lei Phillip Wang of a computer's central processing unit. "The NMDA receptor is a commander, which is why it's called a master switch for brain cell connectivity," said Wang, the study's first author.
To determine their role in habit formation, GHSU researchers used a genetic trick to selectively disable the NMDA receptors on dopamine neurons and found, for example, mice could be trained to push a lever for food without it becoming an automatic response. If they were full, they wouldn't push the lever. But just as humans can't refrain from flipping a light switch during a power outage, satiated mice with receptors could not pass up the lever.
When they compared the firing of the dopamine neurons in regular versus the mutant mouse, they found a dramatic spike in response to a cue that signals food in the normal mouse and a significantly dampened one in the mutant, Wang said. "We think this reduced response is probably sufficient for other types of learning, but not for habit learning," he said.
The finding that the receptors are critical to turning learned behavior into a habit provides new direction for therapy to better treat diseases such as Parkinson's, which in addition to the hallmark shaking, causes the loss of some old habits and impedes the ability to make new ones. "When Parkinson's disease begins to kick in, your memory of habits begins to go away, often before the uncontrolled movement becomes prominent," Tsien said.
It also opens the door to speeding up the process of forming good habits and, possibly, selectively removing bad ones such as drug addiction or smoking since the same circuits are seemingly involved in both.
"If you know cell circuits controlling a specific habit, it puts you in a better position to devise strategies to hit different points and selectively facilitate the formation of a good habit and maybe even reverse a bad one," Tsien said.
The fact that their mutant mice did not have motor deficits like Parkinson's patients fits with the fact that a precursor to dopamine can reduce motor symptoms in these patients, at least for a while, but does little to help cognitive function, Tsien said. Previous research indicating that just dousing a brain with dopamine doesn't rescue the ability to form habits led GHSU researchers to pursue the more sophisticated regulation that must enable habit formation.
"Dopamine neurons regulate circuits all over the brain but they need to be regulated too," Tsien said. "The questions become how and whether regulation of dopamine neurons is important. Our study shows it's important and it's through the NMDA receptors." Part of that regulation includes proper sequencing: so a habit plays out the same way every time, Tsien noted, much like standard lettering on a keyboard enables typing rather than confusion.
Dopamine is a chemical that helps brain cells communication. Glutamate, another neurotransmitter, brings information to the dopamine neurons to enable learning and memory but the neurons must travel through the gateway NMDA receptors to get properly categorized, the researchers noted.
As pervasive and efficient as habits are, these automatic memories that enable driving a car or typing, are not well studied or understood. "We tend not to pay attention to them because they are so spontaneous and automatic," said Tsien. GHSU scientists want to better understand why, for example, certain actions move from purposeful acts to automatic ones. They also want to know if one way NMDA receptors work is by causing dopamine neurons to release dopamine at the right time, amount and places in the brain.
Habits are generally characterized as procedural rather than declarative memories, such as those of events, people and places, things that require active thought. Declarative memories are more typically lost in Alzheimer's while habits often remain intact, at least for a while.
INFORMATION:
Tsien, corresponding author on the study, is the Georgia Research Alliance Eminent Scholar in Cognitive and Systems Neurobiology and a faculty member in GHSU's Medical College of Georgia and College of Graduate Studies. His previous work with NMDA receptors includes creating a mouse that can't form memories by eliminating the receptor. He garnered international acclaim by making "Doogie," a smart mouse that over-expresses a subunit of the NMDA receptor called NR2B. Younger brains have more NR2B which leaves communication channels between brain cells open longer enabling young people to learn faster than older adults. More recently, Tsien replicated this work in another animal, a smart rat dubbed Hobbie-J.
Habit formation is enabled by gateway to brain cells
2011-12-22
ELSE PRESS RELEASES FROM THIS DATE:
Coupon Roo, a New Website Started by a College Student, is Taking the Internet by Storm
2011-12-22
CouponRoo.Com, a leading discount coupon website in the USA, is taking the Internet by storm. The website is started by a college student, and quickly grew to include thousands of retailers. To date, it has included over ten thousand stores on the site.
Discount shopping online
On the Internet, price has always been transparent. In other words, buyers tend to go online to search and compare prices before making a purchase. Retailers are well aware of this fact. In order to capture new customers and retain existing ones, many have resorted to running attractive promotions. ...
Some 'low-gluten' beer contains high levels of gluten
2011-12-22
Beer tested in a new study, including some brands labeled "low-gluten," contains levels of hordein, the form of gluten present in barley, that could cause symptoms in patients with celiac disease (CD), the autoimmune condition treated with a life-long gluten-free diet, scientists are reporting. The study, which weighs in on a controversy over the gluten content of beer, appears in ACS' Journal of Proteome Research.
Michelle Colgrave and colleagues explain that celiac disease (CD) affects more than 2 million people worldwide. Gluten, a protein found in foods and beverages ...
Start the New Year in the Spotlight with a Custom Sign for Your Brand
2011-12-22
Ken Miller, President of Blue Pond Signs, announced today the availability of the 2012 custom signage line for business customers throughout the United States. As many companies seek to refresh their visual identities in the first quarter of the year, Blue Pond Signs streamlines the process of creating customized visual identities, from business signs to logos, in just four weeks.
"Creating a customized corporate visual identity is an important element for companies who seek recognition in today's competitive marketplace" said Miller. "We offer a fast ...
New evidence that bacteria in large intestine have a role in obesity
2011-12-22
Bacteria living in people's large intestine may slow down the activity of the "good" kind of fat tissue, a special fat that quickly burns calories and may help prevent obesity, scientists are reporting in a new study. The discovery, published in ACS' Journal of Proteome Research, could shed light on ways to prevent obesity and promote weight loss, including possible microbial and pharmaceutical approaches, the authors said.
Sandrine P. Claus, Jeremy K. Nicholson and colleagues explain that trillions of bacteria live in the large intestine of healthy people, where they ...
New process could advance use of healthy cells or stem cells to treat disease
2011-12-22
In a discovery that may help speed use of "cell therapy" — with normal cells or stem cells infused into the body to treat disease — scientists are reporting development of a way to deliver therapeutic human cells to diseased areas within the body using a simple magnetic effect. Their report appears in ACS' journal Langmuir.
Rawil Fakhrullin and colleagues explain that cell therapy aims to replace damaged or diseased cells in the human body with normal cells or stem cells. To do so, medical personnel need a way to target these cells to diseased organs or tissues. So-called ...
Home washing machines: Source of potentially harmful ocean 'microplastic' pollution
2011-12-22
WASHINGTON -- The latest episode in the American Chemical Society's (ACS) award-winning "Global Challenges/Chemistry Solutions" podcast series discusses the discovery that household washing machines seem to be a major source of so-called "microplastic" pollution -- bits of polyester and acrylic smaller than the head of a pin -- that researchers now have detected on ocean shorelines worldwide.
In the podcast, Mark Anthony Browne, Ph.D., explains that the accumulation of microplastic debris in marine environments has raised health and safety concerns. The bits of plastic ...
New method of infant pain assessment from Oxford published in JoVE
2011-12-22
Recently, the accuracy of current methods of pain assessment in babies have been called into question. New research from London-area hospitals and the University of Oxford measures brain activity in infants to better understand their pain response.
As every parent knows, interpreting what a baby is feeling is often incredibly difficult. Currently, pain in infants is assessed using the premature infant pain profile (PIPP), which is based on behavioral and physiological body reactions, such as crying and facial expression. Though this is a useful measure, it is largely ...
NIST sensor improvement brings analysis method into mainstream
2011-12-22
An advance in sensor design* by researchers at the National Institute of Standards and Technology (NIST) and the University of Waterloo's Institute of Quantum Computing (IQC) could unshackle a powerful, yet high-maintenance technique for exploring materials. The achievement could expand the technique—called neutron interferometry—from a test of quantum mechanics to a tool for industry as well.
[Watch a short YoutTube video on this work at http://youtu.be/A21iXn2NL-8 ]
Neutron beams can be used in dozens of ways to probe complex molecules and other advanced materials, ...
Positive feedback and tumorigenesis
2011-12-22
Cancer cells are essentially immortal. The acquisition of an unlimited capacity to divide – the process of immortalization - is a central event in the genesis of tumors. Normally, cells are subject to stringent mechanisms which control their proliferation. Together these ensure that pre-malignant cells are induced to enter a senescent, non-dividing state or to undergo apoptosis, i.e. commit suicide. A research team led by Professor Heiko Hermeking and Dr. Antje Menssen from LMU's Institute of Pathology has now discovered how the regulatory protein c-MYC subverts these controls, ...
Prototype NIST device measures absolute optical power in fiber at nanowatt levels
2011-12-22
Researchers at the National Institute of Standards and Technology (NIST) have demonstrated a prototype device capable of absolute measurements of optical power delivered through an optical fiber.
The device is the world's first fiber-coupled cryogenic radiometer that links optical fiber power measurements directly to fundamental electrical units and national standards. It uses a microscopic forest of carbon nanotubes—the world's darkest material—to measure values that are about one-thousandth of the levels typically attained with a cryogenic radiometer lacking direct ...