David Van Essen,
Washington University: New help finding brain’s nooks and crannies
January 24, 2012
Like explorers mapping a new planet, scientists probing the brain need
every type of landmark they can get. Each mountain, river or forest
helps scientists find their way through the intricacies of the human
brain.
Scientists
have found a way to use MRI scanning data to map myelin, a white sheath
that covers some brain cell branches. Such maps, previously only
available via dissection, help scientists detemine precisely where they
are at in the brain. Red and yellow indicate regions with high myelin
levels; blue, purple and black areas have low myelin levels.
Researchers at Washington University School of Medicine in St. Louis
have developed a new technique that provides rapid access to brain
landmarks formerly only available at autopsy. Better brain maps will
result, speeding efforts to understand how the healthy brain works and
potentially aiding in future diagnosis and treatment of brain disorders,
the researchers report in The Journal of Neuroscience Aug. 10.
The technique makes it possible for scientists to map myelination, or
the degree to which branches of brain cells are covered by a white
sheath known as myelin in order to speed up long-distance signaling. It
was developed in part through the Human Connectome Project, a $30
million, five-year effort to map the brain’s wiring. That project is
headed by Washington University in St. Louis and the University of
Minnesota.
“The brain is among the most complex structures known, with
approximately 90 billion neurons transmitting information across 150
trillion connections,” says David Van Essen, PhD, Edison Professor and
head of the Department of Anatomy and Neurobiology at Washington
University. “New perspectives are very helpful for understanding this
complexity, and myelin maps will give us important insights into where
certain parts of the brain end and others begin.”
Easy access to detailed maps of myelination in humans and animals also
will aid efforts to understand how the brain evolved and how it works,
according to Van Essen.
Neuroscientists have known for more than a century that myelination
levels differ throughout the cerebral cortex, the gray outer layer of
the brain where most higher mental functions take place. Until now,
though, the only way they could map these differences in detail was to
remove the brain after death, slice it and stain it for myelin.
Washington University graduate student Matthew Glasser developed the new
technique, which combines data from two types of magnetic resonance
imaging (MRI) scans that have been available for years.
“These are standard ways of imaging brain anatomy that scientists and
clinicians have used for a long time,” Glasser says. “After developing
the new technique, we applied it in a detailed analysis of archived
brain scans from healthy adults.”
As in prior studies, Glasser’s results show highest myelination levels
in areas involved with early processing of information from the eyes and
other sensory organs and control of movement. Many brain cells are
packed into these regions, but the connections among the cells are less
complex. Scientists suspect that these brain regions rely heavily on
what computer scientists call parallel processing: Instead of every cell
in the region working together on a single complex problem, multiple
separate teams of cells work simultaneously on different parts of the
problem.
Areas with less myelin include brain regions linked to speech, reasoning
and use of tools. These regions have brain cells that are packed less
densely, because individual cells are larger and have more complex
connections with neighboring cells.
“It’s
been widely hypothesized that each chunk of the cerebral cortex is made
up of very uniform information-processing machinery,” Van Essen says.
“But we’re now adding to a picture of striking regional differences that
are important for understanding how the brain works.”
According to Van Essen, the technique will make it possible for the
Connectome project to rapidly map myelination in many different research
participants. Data on many subjects, acquired through many different
analytical techniques including myelination mapping, will help the
resulting maps cover the range of anatomic variation present in humans.
“Our colleagues are clamoring to make use of this approach because it’s
so helpful for figuring out where you are in the cortex, and the data
are either already there or can be obtained in less than 10 minutes of
MRI scanning,” Glasser says.