Close Menu
    Facebook X (Twitter) Instagram
    SciTechDaily
    • Biology
    • Chemistry
    • Earth
    • Health
    • Physics
    • Science
    • Space
    • Technology
    Facebook X (Twitter) Pinterest YouTube RSS
    SciTechDaily
    Home»Biology»MIT Researchers Discover Gene Linked to Cognitive Resilience in the Elderly
    Biology

    MIT Researchers Discover Gene Linked to Cognitive Resilience in the Elderly

    By Anne Trafton, Massachusetts Institute of TechnologyNovember 6, 2021No Comments5 Mins Read
    Facebook Twitter Pinterest Telegram LinkedIn WhatsApp Email Reddit
    Share
    Facebook Twitter LinkedIn Pinterest Telegram Email Reddit
    Gene Linked to Cognitive Resilience
    MIT researchers have discovered a gene linked to cognitive resilience in the elderly. Environmental enrichment, they find, appears to activate the MEF2 protein, which controls a genetic program in the brain that promotes resilience to declines related to Alzheimer’s and age-related dementia. Credit: MIT News, iStockphoto

    The findings may help explain why some people who lead enriching lives are less prone to Alzheimer’s and age-related dementia.

    Many people develop Alzheimer’s or other forms of dementia as they get older. However, others remain sharp well into old age, even if their brains show underlying signs of neurodegeneration.

    Among these cognitively resilient people, researchers have identified education level and amount of time spent on intellectually stimulating activities as factors that help prevent dementia. A new study by MIT researchers shows that this kind of enrichment appears to activate a gene family called MEF2, which controls a genetic program in the brain that promotes resistance to cognitive decline.

    The researchers observed this link between MEF2 and cognitive resilience in both humans and mice. The findings suggest that enhancing the activity of MEF2 or its targets might protect against age-related dementia.

    “It’s increasingly understood that there are resilience factors that can protect the function of the brain,” says Li-Huei Tsai, director of MIT’s Picower Institute for Learning and Memory. “Understanding this resilience mechanism could be helpful when we think about therapeutic interventions or prevention of cognitive decline and neurodegeneration-associated dementia.”

    Tsai is the senior author of the study, which was published on November 3, 2021, in Science Translational Medicine. The lead authors are recent MIT PhD recipient Scarlett Barker and MIT postdoctoral fellow and Boston Children’s Hospital physician Ravikiran (Ravi) Raju.

    Protective Effects

    A large body of research suggests that environmental stimulation offers some protection against the effects of neurodegeneration. Studies have linked education level, type of job, number of languages spoken, and amount of time spent on activities such as reading and doing crossword puzzles to higher degrees of cognitive resilience.

    The MIT team set out to try to figure out how these environmental factors affect the brain at the neuronal level. They looked at human datasets and mouse models in parallel, and both tracks converged on MEF2 as a critical player.

    MEF2 is a transcription factor that was originally identified as a factor important for cardiac muscle development, but later was discovered to play a role in neuron function and neurodevelopment. In two human datasets comprising slightly more than 1,000 people altogether, the MIT team found that cognitive resilience was highly correlated with expression of MEF2 and many of the genes that it regulates.

    Many of those genes encode ion channels, which control a neuron’s excitability, or how easily it fires an electrical impulse. The researchers also found, from a single-cell RNA-sequencing study of human brain cells, that MEF2 appears to be most active in a subpopulation of excitatory neurons in the prefrontal cortex of resilient individuals.

    To study cognitive resilience in mice, the researchers compared mice who were raised in cages with no toys, and mice placed in a more stimulating environment with a running wheel and toys that were swapped out every few days. As they found in the human study, MEF2 was more active in the brains of the mice exposed to the enriched environment. These mice also performed better in learning and memory tasks.

    When the researchers knocked out the gene for MEF2 in the frontal cortex, this blocked the mice’s ability to benefit from being raised in the enriched environment, and their neurons became abnormally excitable.

    “This was particularly exciting as it suggested that MEF2 plays a role in determining overall cognitive potential in response to variables in the environment,” Raju says.

    The researchers then explored whether MEF2 could reverse some of the symptoms of cognitive impairment in a mouse model that expresses a version of the tau protein that can form tangles in the brain and is linked with dementia. If these mice were engineered to overexpress MEF2 at a young age, they did not show the usual cognitive impairments produced by the tau protein later in life. In these mice, neurons overexpressing MEF2 were less excitable.

    “A lot of human studies and mouse model studies of neurodegeneration have shown that the neurons become hyperexcitable in early stages of disease progression,” Raju says. “When we overexpressed MEF2 in a mouse model of neurodegeneration, we saw that it was able to prevent this hyperexcitability, which might explain why they performed cognitively better than control mice.”

    Enhancing Resilience

    The findings suggest that enhancing MEF2 activity could help to protect against dementia; however, because MEF2 also affects other types of cells and cellular processes, more study is needed to make sure that activating it wouldn’t have adverse side effects, the researchers say.

    The MIT team now hopes to further investigate how MEF2 becomes activated by exposure to an enriching environment. They also plan to examine some of the effects of the other genes that MEF2 controls, beyond the ion channels they explored in this study. Such studies could help to reveal additional targets for drug treatments.

    “You could potentially imagine a more targeted therapy by identifying a subset or a class of effectors that is critically important for inducing resilience and neuroprotection,” Raju says.

    Reference: “MEF2 is a key regulator of cognitive potential and confers resilience to neurodegeneration” by Scarlett J. Barker, Ravikiran M. Raju, Noah E.P. Milman, Jun Wang, Jose Davila-Velderrain, Fatima Gunter-Rahman, Cameron C. Parro, P. Lorenzo Bozzelli, Fatema Abdurrob, Karim Abdelaal, David A. Bennett, Manolis Kellis and Li-Huei Tsai, 3 November 2021, Science Translational Medicine.
    DOI: 10.1126/scitranslmed.abd7695

    The research was funded by the Glenn Center for Biology of Aging Research, the National Institute of Aging, the Cure Alzheimer’s Fund, and the Eunice Kennedy Shriver National Institute of Child Health and Human Development.

    Never miss a breakthrough: Join the SciTechDaily newsletter.
    Follow us on Google and Google News.

    Alzheimer's Disease Brain Dementia MIT Neuroscience
    Share. Facebook Twitter Pinterest LinkedIn Email Reddit

    Related Articles

    Silent Start and Deadly Damage: Study Shows Alzheimer’s Progresses in Two Devastating Waves

    MRI Uncovers Brain’s Hidden Waste-Removal System, Paving the Way for Alzheimer’s Prevention

    Unsettling Alzheimer’s Theories: The Surprising Impact of Brain Support Cells

    From DNA Damage to Neuron Disruption: MIT’s Comprehensive Alzheimer’s Analysis

    How Tau Tangles Form in the Brain: MIT Scientists Shed Light on Alzheimer’s Disease

    MIT GENUS: 40 Hz Vibrations Reduce Alzheimer’s Disease Symptoms

    Scientists Reveal New Insights Into the Development of Alzheimer’s Disease

    Neuroscientists Discover Brain Mechanism Tied to Age-Related Memory Loss

    Alzheimer’s Spreads Throughout the Brain by Jumping From Neuron to Neuron

    Leave A Reply Cancel Reply

    • Facebook
    • Twitter
    • Pinterest
    • YouTube

    Don't Miss a Discovery

    Subscribe for the Latest in Science & Tech!

    Trending News

    Even Occasional Binge Drinking May Triple Liver Damage Risk

    Liftoff! NASA’s Artemis II Launch Sends Astronauts Around the Moon for First Time in 50 Years

    Scientists Discover New Way To Eliminate “Zombie Cells” Driving Aging

    This New Quantum Theory Could Change Everything We Know About the Big Bang

    This One Vitamin May Help Protect Your Brain From Dementia Years Later

    Stopping Weight-Loss Drugs Like Ozempic Can Quickly Erase Heart Benefits

    A 500-Million-Year-Old Surprise Is Forcing Scientists to Rethink Spider Evolution

    Coffee and Blood Pressure: What You Need To Know Before Your Next Cup

    Follow SciTechDaily
    • Facebook
    • Twitter
    • YouTube
    • Pinterest
    • Newsletter
    • RSS
    SciTech News
    • Biology News
    • Chemistry News
    • Earth News
    • Health News
    • Physics News
    • Science News
    • Space News
    • Technology News
    Recent Posts
    • You Don’t Need To Be Rich: New Study Reveals a Simple Life Is the Real Secret to Happiness
    • “Crazy Dice” Help Scientists Prove Only One 150-Year-Old Theory About Randomness Works
    • Scientists Discover Hidden “Good Fats” in Green Rice That Could Transform Nutrition
    • Longevity Isn’t Equal: Why Life-Extending Treatments May Be a “Biological Lottery”
    • AI May Soon Detect Cancer Just by Listening to You Speak
    Copyright © 1998 - 2026 SciTechDaily. All Rights Reserved.
    • Science News
    • About
    • Contact
    • Editorial Board
    • Privacy Policy
    • Terms of Use

    Type above and press Enter to search. Press Esc to cancel.