Mystery Solved: How Nerve Impulse Generators Get Where They Need to Go

Study identifies essential molecule for transport of protein from neuron cell body to axon.

Written byOhio State University
| 4 min read
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COLUMBUS, Ohio – Scientists have solved a longstanding mystery of the central nervous system, showing how a key protein gets to the right spot to launch electrical impulses that enable communication of nerve signals to and from the brain.
 
Nerve impulses are critical because they are required for neurons to send information about senses, movement, thinking and feeling to other cell types in the neural circuitry. And an impulse is not fired up just once; it is initiated and then must be repeatedly transmitted along axons – long, slender extensions of nerve cell bodies – to keep the nervous system’s messages stable during their rapid travel.

For example, if your finger touches a hot stove, nerve impulses support quick communication between nerve cells in the hand and the brain so you avoid a serious burn.

This new research reveals a part of the process that was not understood before, about how a “molecular motor” helps move the impulse generator to its proper place on an axon to perform this vital job.

“This study is solving a very fundamental question,” said Chen Gu, assistant professor of neuroscience at the Ohio State University and lead author of the paper. “If these channel proteins don’t get into the nerves, nothing happens. They have to be correctly delivered and inserted into the axon to be functional.”

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