Astrocytes Help Separate Man from Mouse

A type of brain cell that was long overlooked by researchers embodies one of very few ways in which the human brain differs fundamentally from that of a mouse or rat, according to neuroscientists who published their findings as the cover story in the March 11 issue of the Journal of Neuroscience.

Scientists at the University of Rochester Medical Center found that human astrocytes are bigger, faster, and much more complex than those in mice and rats.

“There aren’t many differences known between the rodent brain and the human brain, but we are finding striking differences in the astrocytes. Our astrocytes signal faster, and they’re bigger and more complex. This has big implications for how our brains process information,” said first author Nancy Ann Oberheim, Ph.D., a medical student who recently completed her doctoral thesis on astrocytes.

The study is one of the most extensive examinations yet of the astrocyte. Oberheim and co-authors discovered a previously unknown form of the cell, a varicose projection astrocyte, in the human brain but not in the rodent brain. The team also found that the most abundant type of astrocyte, protoplasmic astrocytes, are approximately 2.6 times larger than their rodent counterparts, and that the human cells have about 10 times as many “processes,” or structures designed to connect to other cells.

“We have not really been able to understand why the human brain is so much more capable than that of any other animal,” said neuroscientist Maiken Nedergaard, M.D., D.M.Sc., who led the study. “Some people have thought that it’s simply that a bigger brain is a better brain, but an elephant’s brain is bigger than a person’s, for example, but it’s not nearly as powerful. So that’s not the answer.

“It may be that humans have a much higher brain capacity in large part because our astrocytes are more sophisticated and have more complex processing power,” added Nedergaard, who spoke last week at a Gordon Research Conference on glial biology. “Studies in rodents show that non-neuronal cells are part of information processing, and our study suggests that astrocytes are part of the higher cognitive functioning that defines who we are as humans.”

The secret lives of astrocytes

Astrocytes had long been considered passive support cells, a means to hold the rest of the brain cells together, like glue. Medical students might spend a few minutes pondering the astrocyte before moving on to their flashy counterparts – the neurons, which are the target of every currently available drug aimed at brain cells. If astrocytes were important, scientists thought, it was most likely because they help create a healthy environment for the neurons.

It turns out that astrocytes had been pushed to the boundaries of neuroscience because of a gap in the tools used to study the brain. Astrocytes don’t fire in the same way as neurons, and so conventional techniques don’t record their activity.

So Nedergaard devised a new way to “listen” for astrocyte activity, developing a sophisticated laser system to look at their activity by measuring the amount of calcium inside the cells. Her team has discovered what might be called the secret lives of astrocytes and has made a series of startling discoveries. Astrocytes use calcium to send signals to the neurons, and the neurons respond; neurons and astrocytes talk back and forth, indicating that astrocytes are full partners in the basic working of the brain; and astrocytes are central to conditions like stroke, Alzheimer’s, epilepsy, and spinal cord injury.

The brain’s two signaling systems – one composed of neurons, and one of astrocytes – complement each other, Nedergaard said. Neurons send signals extremely quickly over long distances, while astrocytes send slower signals whose function is still being worked out by scientists.

“The brain contains two communication networks using different languages,” said Nedergaard, director of the Division of Glial Disease and Therapeutics of the Center for Translational Neuromedicine. “You have a highly sophisticated electrical network embodied in the neurons, which send signals instantaneously. And then you have a much slower network composed of astrocytes whose signals are 10,000 times slower but which might be able to process the information in a more sophisticated manner and retrieve memories.

“There is no other tissue in the body that mixes up two different types of cells so completely as how astrocytes and neurons are interspersed throughout the brain,” Nedergaard added. “Both comprise extensive signaling networks. Where those networks interface and how they interact makes the brain so interesting.”

To do the study, the team studied human brain tissue taken from 30 people who had had surgery, mostly to treat epilepsy or brain tumors. They compared the astrocytes in human brains to those in mice and rats. In addition to the findings above, the team noted additional differences: