PLASTICITY IN THE CNSLEARNING FROM EXPERIENCE
The third
principle of this chapter stated that the CNS responds to experience by learning—that is, it
reorganizes some of its neurochemistry and connections so that the experience is remembered. It is
very important to understand that this plasticity is a broad concept. Not only
does the CNS remember events that are consciously experienced, but it also
changes in response to all sorts of signals,
such as the constant presence of drugs.
The most
familiar plasticity in the CNS is the simple remembering of experiences—faces, odors, names, classroom lectures, and
lots more. The neurobiological mechanisms through which this kind
of learning happens are not
completely understood, but we have some clues. One important site of learning
appears to be the synapse.
As discussed, synapses of nerve cells are quite
complex, and there is extensive
biochemical machinery in both the presynaptic and the post-synaptic areas. We think memory is built one
synapse at a time: some synapses that
are stimulated repeatedly change how they function (learn) and maintain that change for a long time. 'There
is an electrical manifestation of
this learning that scientists call long-term potentiation (ITP). It is a long-lasting strengthening (potentiation) of the
electrical signal between two neurons
that occurs when the synapse between them is stimulated.
We're not sure how this happens, but it is likely
through a series of biochemical
changes in how the first neuron releases its neurotransmitter and/or in how the second neuron responds to the
neurotransmitter. On the presynaptic
side, a synapse could be strengthened by increasing the number of presynaptic terminals, by releasing more
transmitters from the same number of
terminals, or by a reduction in transmitter removal. On the postsynaptic side,
strengthening could occur with an increase in the number of receptors, a change in the functional properties of the receptors, a change in how well the postsynaptic
site is coupled to the remainder of
the neuron, or a change in the biochemistry of the postsynaptic neuron. There is scientific controversy about
the true mechanisms of um and the issue may not be
clear for a number of years.
Almost every neuron can modify many aspects of its
function to adapt to new conditions—by making more or less neurotransmitter, by
changing the number of receptors on
the surface of its cells, by changing the number of molecules responsible for the passage of the electrical stimulus down the axon, and so forth. If a neural
circuit is being overstimulated, it
can reduce the stimulation by removing some of the receptors for the neurotransmitter stimulating it.
Therefore, even if the neural circuit
is being sent lots of signals, they don't get through. Alternatively, if a neural circuit is receiving much less stimulation
than usual, it can adapt by becoming
more sensitive to each stimulus. This is how the brain stays
in balance.
This type of biochemical plasticity goes on all the
time and is part of normal brain
function. However, these same changes can cause abnormal brain function. For example, we think that the
tremendous mood changes in depression might result from changing numbers of
neurotransmitter receptors following
changing stimulation of specific neurons in the brain. If neurons and synapses
learn, do they also forget? The answer appears to be yes. We just described how stimulating a neural pathway in a
certain way can cause it to
"learn" to respond to stimulation differently. Stimulating it in another way (slowly, and for a long
time) can cause a process called
depotentiation, which appears to be the opposite of long-term potentiation. Why is this interesting?
Depotentiation could be quite important
because it may represent the synaptic equivalent of amnesia. Depotentiation can be produced by prolonged slow
activity or by very strong
high-frequency activity, like that which occurs in seizures. It may be a protective mechanism by which the CNS prevents
a seizure or brain trauma from
encoding new information into the circuits. Again, it is almost certainly under the control of
cell-signaling pathways and thus
could be manipulated by drugs.
This gradual change in
the electrical strength of a connection seems subtle, but it makes intuitive sense that memories could form in this
way. Can the brain actually change
physically? We used to think that once a person was mature, the brain didn't change anymore. However, more and more research shows that actual changes in the
shapes of neurons also can happen in
response to earlier experiences. We know that the shape of certain neurons in the brain changes when different
hormones become available. For example, at least in animals, treating them with
hormones can stimulate the production
of little protuberances, or "spines," on the dendrites of neurons. Other research has shown that
synapses actually remodel themselves
over time after different levels of activity. So, connections actually get lost or remade. For example,
prolonged stress seems to actually
shrink the dendrite on neurons, perhaps explaining the cognitive difficulties people encounter
during prolonged stressful periods.
It has been known for a
long time that this happened in lower animals. For example, as songbirds learn new songs, the structure of certain parts
of their brains changes. It was once
thought that the brains of mammals did
not have this type of structural plasticity. However, more recent studies have shown similar changes in rats, and
scientists think that they
probably occur in all mammals.
The most exciting recent development in neuronal
plasticity is our understanding that
the brain can actually make new neurons. This process, called neurogenesis, was long thought to
occur mostly during prenatal
development, but now we find that it is happening in adult humans. Neurogenesis
results from the conversion of neural stem cells into functional neurons. The rate of conversion seems to
increase in response to injury or other pathologies and decrease in
response to chronic stress. As with most neuroscience research, the
data come primarily from animal experiments, usually rats, and as always, relevance to humans needs to be established.
There have been some intriguing
findings regarding the effects of drugs on
neurogenesis in animals. It appears that depression reduces neurogenesis and subsequent treatment with antidepressants restores it. More relevant to this book, the laboratory of Fulton Crews at the University of North Carolina has made the startling discovery that binge exposure to alcohol dramatically suppresses rat neurogenesis, particularly in the
adolescent forebrain, which is a brain area in rapid
development. The potential implications of this
are enormous, because adolescents tend to be binge drinkers. Is this behavior impairing their brain development? What
other drugs affect these processes? Does this
really happen in humans? These questions should and will be answered by future
research, but for now they alert us to the
possibility that drug abuse could have profound effects on teenage brain development