Abk�rzung zur Hauptnavigation Abk�rzung zu den Newsmeldungen Abk�rzung zu den Topstories  
  MedUni Vienna    Intranet    MedUni Vienna - Shop    University Library    University Hospital Vienna  
 
Cluster_Neurowissenschaften_EN.png
 
 
 
Hauptnavigation
  • Home
  • General Information
  • Research
  • Education
  • Press Review
 
Neuroscience /
 
Subnavigation
    News
     

    New possibilities for children affected by strokes

    The EU Horizon 2020 project examines the spatial challenges faced by children following a stroke in..

     

    Autoimmune diseases: discovery of central building block in immune cells

    Autoimmune diseases are triggered when the immune system malfunctions and attacks the body's own..

     

    New edition of WHO Classification of Brain Tumours

    Anyone involved in the care of cancer patients is familiar with the World Health Organization's..

     

    Self-help method prevents mental disorders among refugees

    An international research group including staff from MedUni Vienna has studied the effects of a..

     

    New MRI technique could improve diagnosis and treatment of multiple sclerosis - 7-Tesla MR reveals neurochemical brain changes at an early stage

    It is important that multiple sclerosis (MS) is diagnosed and treated as early as possible in order..

     

    Cannabis in medicine: enormous therapeutic potential but reliable studies still lacking

    For more than twenty years now, international research into the endocannabinoid system in the human..

     

    Fetal MRI is a valuable adjunct to ultrasound in detecting abnormal extracardiac development in fetuses with congenital heart defects

    Newborn babies with heart defects frequently exhibit abnormal extracardiac development of the brain..

     
    Treffer 22 bis 28 von 169
    << Erste < Vorherige Page 1 Page 2 Page 3 Page 4 Page 5 Page 6 Page 7 Nächste > Letzte >>
     
Inhaltsbereich

Newly discovered: neuronal cell type for controlling the flow of information in the brain

A scientific team from MedUni Vienna's Center for Brain Research has now identified specific cells that regulate the transmission of information between brain areas. This discovery forms the basis for the development of new treatment options for neuropsychiatric disorders such as schizophrenia and autism, which are characterised by impaired coordination of information flow in the brain. The study has now been published in the top journal "Science".

 

The scientists focused their basic research on the question of how communication between different brain areas is regulated and how the constantly changing streams of information from different sources can be processed without errors. Ece Sakalar, Thomas Klausberger and Balint Lasztoczi from the Division of Cognitive Neurobiology at MedUni Vienna's Center for Brain Research sought and found answers in the so-called CA1 area of the hippocampus, a central switchboard in the brain. There, the so-called neurogliaform cells cause the converging information about the current environment and also about relevant past experiences to be combined without being mixed up.

Thus far, science has been in the dark when it comes to the function of neurogliaform cells. "In our preclinical experiments, we have now discovered that neurogliaform cells, by briefly inhibiting other cell types, ensure that current perception and memories of past experiences can be processed both separately and also in combination," explains study author Balint Lasztoczi. This is what makes it possible, when looking at a photograph of one's grandmother (sensory information) and spontaneously recalling the smell of her homemade cakes (memory), to remain aware of what is happening in the here and now and what is being remembered.

Traffic light in the flow of information
The regulation of ongoing and remembered information and the smooth flow of communication between brain areas is the basis for a functioning nervous system. In various neuropsychiatric disorders, such as schizophrenia and autism, this organisation is impaired. In this context, the current research results from the MedUni Vienna study offer hope: by deciphering the function of neurogliaform cells as traffic lights in the flow of information, the researchers are laying foundations for the development of new treatment options. Next in their research, the scientists intend to investigate how the activity of neurogliaform cells can be influenced to form the starting point for new drugs and therapeutic options for neuropsychiatric disorders such as schizophrenia and autism.

Published in: Science
Neurogliaform cells dynamically decouple neuronal synchrony between brain areas
Ece Sakalar, Thomas Klausberger, Balint Lasztoczi
Doi: 10.1126/science.abo3355

www.science.org/doi/10.1126/science.abo3355

 

 

zurück zu: Neuroscience
 
 
Print
 
 
© MedUni Wien | Publishing information | Terms of use | Data Protection | Accessibility | Contact