Watch the introduction to the Brain Rules DVD below in HD (or here). The DVD is included with every hardcover book.
Below is the exercise segment in HD. You can also view it here. To learn more about how exercise boosts brain power, check out the exercise tutorial.
11.27.2008
Brain Rules in HD
11.06.2008
Painting Neural Circuitry With a Viral Brush: Are the Neighbors Green?
Note: This is the second installment of a two-part series describing the use of engineered rabies viruses in the elucidation of neural circuits. These columns appear in the Psychiatric Times. Learn about Brain Rules here.
As mentioned last month, the rabies virus has several biological aspects that make it an ideal delivery device for working with living neural tissues. Once inside a nerve cell, the virus sets up a manufacturing site to create more viruses, like any typical virus. At maturity, however, these progenies jump to neighboring neurons, which allows the virus to spread along specific neural routes. This life cycle is handy if you are interested in synaptic connections throughout the body.
The infection can start in the peripheral nervous system and then jump the stout molecular border that separates it from the CNS. (That is why a bite anywhere on the body can result in a catastrophic brain infection.) If one could find a way to follow the virus, one could identify the routes by which it travels.
Aspects of this jumping ability were exploited in the circuit-mapping experiments we are about to review. Both virus and cell had to be genetically manipulated in 3 different ways for the experiment to work.