
© Rockefeller UniversityMind-blowing. In C. elegans, fluorescent images show that when brain cells called glia are zapped -- and killed -- with a microscopic laser, neurons (red) survive but are highly abnormal (right) compared to normal ones (left).
Again and again, experiments confirmed it. Without glia, neurons die. So scientists who wanted to study in living animals what glia - the most abundant brain cells - do for neurons besides keep them alive were out of luck. But now, a breakthrough.
A system unveiled and described by Rockefeller University scientists shows that in the
Caenorhabditis elegans worm, neurons live on despite the absence of glia, a landmark discovery that paves the way for scientists to explore the dialogue between these team players in their natural environment.
"As far as we know, this is the first system where removing glia does not affect neuronal survival," says Shai Shaham, head of the Laboratory of Developmental Genetics, who made the discovery along with graduate student Satoshi Yoshimura. "So now we can study glia and the contributions they make in the developing brain in this
in vivo context."