Feature

Adult brains contain millions of ‘silent synapses’


 

There are millions of immature connections between the neurons in brains of adults that remain inactive until they’re recruited to help form new memories, according to neuroscientists from the Massachusetts Institute of Technology.

What to know:

  • An estimated 30% of all synapses in the brain’s cortex are silent and become active to allow the adult brain to continually form new memories and leave existing conventional synapses unmodified.
  • Silent synapses are looking for new connections, and when important new information is presented, connections between the relevant neurons are strengthened to allow the brain to remember new things.
  • Using the silent synapses for the new memories does not overwrite the important memories stored in more mature synapses, which are harder to change.
  • The brain’s neurons display a wide range of plasticity mechanisms that account for how brains can efficiently learn new things and retain them in long-term memory.
  • Flexibility of synapses is critical for acquiring new information, and stability is required to retain important information, enabling one to more easily adjust and change behaviors and habits or incorporate new information.

This is a summary of the article, “Filopodia Are a Structural Substrate for Silent Synapses in Adult Neocortex,” published in Nature Nov. 30, 2022. The full article can be found at nature.com .

A version of this article first appeared on Medscape.com.

Recommended Reading

Long-term depression may hasten brain aging in midlife
MDedge Neurology
We don’t lose our keys (or other things) as much as we think
MDedge Neurology
Unexpected link between light drinking and dementia risk
MDedge Neurology
How a concussion led a former football player/WWE star to a pioneering neuroscience career
MDedge Neurology
Be aware of hepatic encephalopathy, dementia overlap in older patients with cirrhosis
MDedge Neurology
Medicare ‘offers’ cancer patient a choice: Less life or more debt
MDedge Neurology
Drug combo promising in vascular cognitive impairment: LACI-2 trial results
MDedge Neurology
What’s new in brain health?
MDedge Neurology
Slowing, not stopping, Alzheimer’s a better goal for clinical trials?
MDedge Neurology
Diabetes drug tied to lower dementia risk
MDedge Neurology