Cornell research may have implications for treating human
ITHACA,
N.Y. -- Using a state-of-the-art technique to map neurons in the spinal
cord of a larval zebrafish, Cornell University scientists have found a
surprising pattern of activity that regulates the speed of the
fish’s movement. The research may have long-term implications for
treating injured human spinal cords and Parkinson’s disease,
where movements slow down and become erratic.
The study, "A Topographic Map of Recruitment
in Spinal Cord," published in the March 1 issue of the journal Nature,
maps how neurons in the bottom of the fish’s spinal cord become
active during slow movements, while cells further up the spinal cord
activate as movements speed up.
By removing specific neurons in the lower spinal cord with
laser beams, the researchers rendered the fish incapable of slow
movements. By removing nerves further up the backbone, the fish had
difficulty moving fast.
"No one had any idea that organization like
this existed in a spinal cord," said Joseph Fetcho, a Cornell professor
of neurobiology and behavior and an author of the study. "Now that we
know the pattern, we can begin to ask how that changes in disease
states."
David McLean, Cornell postdoctoral researcher
in Fetcho’s laboratory, was the first person to discover the
pattern of neural activation and how it was associated with speed of
movement. He is the lead author on the study.
The researchers worked with 4 millimeter-long
larval zebrafish (Danio rerio) because they are transparent and
researchers can see their cells. Fetcho and his colleagues injected the
fishes’ spinal cords with a fluorescent dye, which then lit up
when calcium ions flooded in as the nerve cells activated. A confocal
microscope with lasers allowed the researchers to image the cells at
very high resolutions. Using this set up, they watched nerve cells
light up as the animals moved at different speeds.
While no one knows how this pattern relates to other
vertebrates, the research opens a door toward basic understanding of
the architecture and function of nerves in spinal cords. With regard to
Regeneration of spinal cords following injury, for example, medical
researchers need a template for a normal spinal cord in order to know
if nerves are re-growing normally, Fetcho said.
In Parkinson’s disease, researchers believe that a
Neurotransmitter released by brain cells may contribute to activating a
system of nerves and muscles that allow for faster movement. They
suspect that damage to these brain cells may disrupt the release of
dopamine, further complicating free movement. Fetcho and his group are
building a transgenic line of fish with those brain cells labeled so
they may be targeted and removed with lasers.
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EMBARGOED FOR RELEASE: Wednesday, Feb. 28, 2007, at 1 p.m. Eastern Time
The other co-authors are: Melina Hale, an assistant
professor at the University of Chicago’s Department of Organismal
Biology and Anatomy; Jing Yi Phan, a postdoctoral researcher in
Hale’s laboratory; and Shin-ichi Higashijima, a former
postdoctoral researcher in Fetcho’s laboratory. Hale is a former
postdoctoral researcher in Fetcho’s laboratory, Hale and Jing Yi
conducted the work using lasers to remove nerve cells.
The study was funded by the National Institutes of Health in
the United States and the Ministry of Education, Science, Technology,
Sports and Culture of Japan.
Contact: Blaine Friedlander
bpf2@cornell.edu
607-254-8093
Cornell University News Service