Researchers find new actions of neurochemicals

Although the tiny roundworm Caenorhabditis elegans has only 302 neurons in its entire nervous system, studies of this simple animal have significantly advanced our understanding of human brain function because it shares many genes and neurochemical signaling molecules with humans. Now MIT researchers have found novel C. elegans neurochemical receptors, the discovery of which could lead to new therapeutic targets for psychiatric disorders if similar receptors are found in humans.

Dopamine and serotonin are members of a class of neurochemicals called biogenic amines, which function in neuronal circuitry throughout the brain. Many drugs used to treat psychiatric disorders, including depression and schizophrenia, target these signaling systems, as do cocaine and other drugs of abuse. Scientists have long known of a class of biogenic-amine receptors that are G protein-coupled receptors (GPCRs) and that, when activated, trigger a slow but long-lasting cascade of intracellular events that modulate nervous system activity.

A study in the July 3 issue of Science has found that in C. elegans these chemicals also act on receptors of a fundamentally different type. These receptors are chloride channels that open and close quickly in response to the binding of a neurochemical messenger. By allowing the passage of negatively charged chloride ions across the cell membrane, chloride channels can rapidly inactivate nerve cells.

“These results underscore the importance of determining whether, as in the C. elegans nervous system, a diversity of biogenic amine-gated chloride channels function in the human brain,” said H. Robert Horvitz of the McGovern Institute for Brain Research at MIT and senior author of the study. “If so, such channels might define novel therapeutic targets for neuropsychiatric disorders, such as depression and schizophrenia.”

In 2000, Horvitz’s group discovered that serotonin activates a chloride channel they called MOD-1, which inhibits neuronal activity in C. elegans.

In the current study, Niels Ringstad and Namiko Abe, a postdoctoral researcher and an undergraduate in Horvitz’s laboratory, respectively, looked for other ion channels that could be receptors for biogenic amines. Using both in vitro and in vivo methods, they surveyed the functions of 26 ion channels similar to MOD-1 and found three additional ion channels with an affinity for biogenic amines: dopamine activates one, serotonin another, and tyramine (the role of which in the human brain is unknown) a third. All three were chloride channels, like MOD-1.

“We now have four members of a family of chloride channels that can act as receptors for biogenic amines in the worm,” Ringstad said. “That these neurochemicals activate both GPCRs and ion channels means that they can have very complex actions in the nervous system, both as slow-acting neuromodulators and as fast-acting inhibitory neurotransmitters.”

It is unknown as yet whether an equivalent to this new class of worm receptor exists in the human brain, but Horvitz points out that worms have proved remarkably informative for providing insights into human biology. In 2002, Horvitz shared the Nobel Prize in Physiology or Medicine for the discovery based on studies of C. elegans of the mechanism of programmed cell death, a central feature of some neurodegenerative diseases and many other disorders in humans.

“Historically, studies of C. elegans have delineated mechanisms of neurotransmission that subsequently proved to be conserved in humans,” says Horvitz, the David H. Koch Professor of Biology at MIT and a Howard Hughes Medical Institute Investigator. “The next step is to look for chloride channels controlled by biogenic amines in mammalian neurons.”

This study was supported by the NIH, the Howard Hughes Medical Institute, the Life Sciences Research Foundation, and The Medical Foundation.

McGovern Institute to present inaugural Edward M. Scolnick Prize in Neuroscience Research

The Edward M. Scolnick Prize in Neuroscience Research will be awarded on Friday April 23rd at the McGovern Institute at MIT, a leading research and teaching institute committed to advancing understanding of the human mind and communications. According to Dr. Phillip A. Sharp, Director of the Institute, this annual research prize will recognize outstanding discoveries or significant advances in the field of neuroscience.

The inaugural prize will be presented to Dr. Masakazu Konishi, Bing Professor of Behavioral Biology at the California Institute of Technology. As part of the day’s events, Dr. Konishi will present a free public lecture, “Non-linear steps to high stimulus selectivity in different sensory systems” at 1:30 PM on Friday, April 23rd at MIT (building E25, room 111.) Following the lecture, The McGovern Institute is hosting an invitation-only reception and dinner honoring Dr. Konishi at the MIT Faculty Club. Speakers for the evening award presentation include: Dr. Sharp; Patrick J. McGovern, Founder and Chairman of International Data Group (IDG) and trustee of MIT and the Institute; Edward Scolnick, former President of Merck Research Laboratories; and Torsten Wiesel, President Emeritus of Rockefeller University.

“I am pleased, on behalf of the McGovern Institute, to recognize the important work that Dr. Mark Konishi is doing,” said Dr. Sharp. “Dr. Konishi is being recognized for his fundamental discoveries concerning mechanisms in the brain for sound location such as a neural topographic map of auditory space. Through a combination of his discoveries, the positive influence of his rigorous approach, and the cadre of young scientists he has mentored and trained, Dr. Konishi has improved our knowledge of how the brain works, and the future of neuroscience research. Mark is truly a leader, and well-deserving of this prestigious honor.”

Dr. Konishi received his B.S and M.S degrees from Hokkaido University in Sapporo, Japan and his Doctorate from the University of California, Berkeley in 1963. After holding positions at the University of Tubingen and the Max-Planck Institute in Germany, Dr. Konishi returned to the United States, where he worked at the University of Wisconsin and Princeton University before coming to the California Institute of Technology in 1975 as Professor of Biology. He has been the Bing Professor of Behavioral Biology at Caltech since 1980. With scores of publications dating back to 1971, and as the recipient of fourteen previous awards, Dr. Konishi has forged a deserved reputation as an outstanding investigator.

Among his many findings, Dr. Konishi is known for his fundamental discoveries concerning sound location by the barn owl and the song system in the bird. He discovered that in the inferior colliculus of the brain of the barn owl there is a map of auditory space and he identified the computational principles and the neural mechanisms that underlie the workings of the map.

The creation of the Edward M. Scolnick Prize was announced last year, with the first presentation scheduled for 2004. The annual prize consists of an award equal to $50,000 and will be given each year to an outstanding leader in the international neuroscience research community. The McGovern Institute will host a public lecture by Dr. Konishi in the spring of 2004, followed by an award presentation ceremony.

The award is named in honor of Dr. Edward M. Scolnick, who stepped down as President of Merck Research Laboratories in December 2002, after holding Merck & Co., Inc.’s top research post for 17 years. During his tenure, Dr. Scolnick led the discovery, development and introduction of 29 new medicines and vaccines. While many of the medicines and vaccines have contributed to improving patient health, some have revolutionized the ways in which certain diseases are treated.

About the McGovern Institute at MIT

The McGovern Institute at MIT is a research and teaching institute committed to advancing human understanding and communications. The goal of the McGovern Institute is to investigate and ultimately understand the biological basis of all higher brain function in humans. The McGovern Institute conducts integrated research in neuroscience, genetic and cellular neurobiology, cognitive science, computation, and related areas.

By determining how the brain works, from the level of gene expression in individual neurons to the interrelationships between complex neural networks, the McGovern Institute’s efforts work to improve human health, discover the basis of learning and recognition, and enhance education and communication. The McGovern Institute contributes to the most basic knowledge of the fundamental mysteries of human awareness, decisions, and actions.