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From:
Meir Weiss <[log in to unmask]>
Reply To:
St. John's University Cerebral Palsy List
Date:
Fri, 25 Mar 2005 13:41:14 -0500
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Shortcut to:
http://www.hopkinsmedicine.org/Press_releases/2005/02_23_05.html
Johns Hopkins Medicine
Office of Corporate Communications
Media Contact: Joanna Downer or Katherine Unger
410-614-5105; [log in to unmask]
February 24, 2005

CELLULAR PORTHOLE CONNECTS ODORS TO BRAIN
Porthole used in both odor-detecting cells and digestion-aiding cells

A cellular "porthole" known best for its role in the digestive system
apparently has a major role in helping the brain sense odors, Johns
Hopkins scientists report in the Feb. 17 issue of Neuron. The porthole,
which lets chloride into cells, is also critical in digestion, hearing,
balance, and fertility.

The researchers suggest that digestive system cells and odor-detecting
cells use the same chloride porthole, or ion transporter -- the former
to facilitate secretion of digestive juices, and the latter to
communicate information about scents to the brain.

Although scientists have long known that odor-sensing cells require lots
of charged chloride atoms, or ions, to relay odor signals to the brain,
they did not know how cells keep levels of chloride high inside of the
cells. Now Hopkins researchers have shown that these high chloride
levels in odor-detecting cells depend on the same transporter, known as
NKCC1, used in many other types of cells as well.

"It's not unusual for the body to use the same machinery to solve
different problems," notes one of the lead authors, Jonathan Bradley,
Ph.D., a postdoctoral fellow in neuroscience. "Chloride is a kind of
jack-of-all-trades that cells can hijack to do what they want."

Odor-detecting nerve cells are long and thin, extending from the tissues
lining the nose where odors are sensed all the way to the brain. When
you smell cookies baking, odor molecules bind to these cells, triggering
a series of molecular "gates" on the cell surface to open. The open
gates let charged ions, including chloride, move in and out of the cell,
creating differences in charge between the inside and outside of the
cell. Such differences allow electrical signals to travel to the brain,
telling you that home-made cookies are nearby.

Bradley and co-author Johannes Reisert, Ph.D., suspected NKCC1 might be
involved in this process precisely because of the transporter's known
importance in regulating chloride in many other tissues. Since NKCC1
appears in other cell types, and because odor-detecting nerve cells
neurons need large amounts of chloride to sense odors, Reisert and
Bradley hypothesized that NKCC1 was responsible for maintaining high
chloride levels in odor-sensing cells too.

To test their idea, the researchers exposed individual odor-detecting
nerve cells from mice to odor molecules. Unlike normal cells, those
without functional NKCC1 had no detectable chloride movement, indicating
that the NKCC1 transporter was indeed responsible for the necessary
chloride current.

Bradley and Reisert also discovered that the porthole was located on an
unexpected region of the odor-detecting cell. However, its location on
these cells corresponds to its location on cells that line the digestive
tract -- reinforcing the idea of "borrowed" machinery.

"At first we were surprised to find this location of the transporter,"
says Bradley, "but in hindsight it makes sense -- both types of cells
need to keep chloride high in order to do their jobs, and the
transporter's location helps them."

Now that the chloride-controlling machinery in the nose is known,
scientists can probe details of chloride's involvement in sending
information to the brain, the researchers say. Bradley and Reisert
suspect that having lots of chloride available in odor-detecting cells
may help the brain discriminate between different smells.

"The involvement of chloride might also make the cells' response to odor
more robust and reliable," says Reisert, also a postdoctoral fellow in
neuroscience.

The researchers plan to study the behavior of mice without NKCC1 and are
now attempting to clone and characterize the chloride transporter to get
a better sense of how chloride is required for odor detection.

These studies were funded by the Howard Hughes Medical Institute. The
authors on the paper were Reisert, Jun Lai, King-Wai Yau and Bradley,
all from Johns Hopkins.

--JHMI--

On the Web:

http://www.neuron.org/






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