News Release

Research solves mystery of memory and mood

Scientists are 1 step closer to understanding how the brain regulates memory and mood, thanks to the discovery of 2 distinct types of stem cells

Peer-Reviewed Publication

University of Queensland

Dhanisha Jhaveri, The University of Queensland

image: This image shows Dr. Dhanisha Jhaveri of the Queensland Brain Institute at The University of Queensland. view more 

Credit: The University of Queensland

Scientists are one step closer to understanding how the brain regulates memory and mood, thanks to the discovery of two distinct types of stem cells.

University of Queensland researchers have identified two types of stem cells in the hippocampus, a region of the brain crucial for learning and memory.

Dr Dhanisha Jhaveri, the study's lead author, said Queensland Brain Institute (QBI) researchers had isolated pure populations of these cells for the first time.

The discovery may have implications for the treatment of learning- and mood-related disorders.

"The stem cells we have identified give rise to new neurons," Dr Jhaveri said.

"The production of new neurons in the brain, a process that decreases as we age, is essential for learning and cognitive function."

Professor Perry Bartlett, QBI director, said the discovery solved a longstanding mystery about the birth of new neurons in the hippocampus.

"Previously, these neurons were all thought to be identical, so it wasn't understood how the region is able to regulate behaviours as divergent as learning and mood," he said.

"The existence of distinct stem cell populations suggests that they give rise to different types of neurons, which explains the varied functions of the hippocampus."

Dr Jhaveri said the discovery was made using state-of-the-art cell-sorting and DNA technologies.

"The two cell groups are located in different regions of the hippocampus, which suggests that distinct areas within the hippocampus control spatial learning versus mood," she said.

"When we purified the cells we found that they are activated by different mechanisms, and generate new neurons that differ in their gene expression."

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The study, Purification of neural precursor cells reveals the presence of distinct, stimulus-specific subpopulations of quiescent precursors in the adult mouse hippocampus, is published in The Journal of Neuroscience.

The research was funded by the National Health and Medical Council, the Australian Research Council, and the Estate of Dr Clem Jones AO.

Media: Dr Dhanisha Jhaveri +61 7 3346 6381, dhanisha@uq.edu.au.


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