Aging and Adult Neurogenesis in the Hippocampus
Clearly change must occur constantly in the adult brain. However we suppose information to be encoded in physical structures of the brain, the information content of a brain evidently changes over time, as illustrated by the processes of memory and learning, and thus the structure of the brain must also change. Nonetheless, if one backtracks to the early 1990s, the consensus at the time was that new neurons were not created in the adult brain. Any change in the brain's information content was thought to be a matter of rearranging axonal connections between neurons or to involve alterations in other, smaller-scale structures such as dendritic spines. Then it was persuasively demonstrated that the creation of new neurons does in fact occur in adult mice.
In the grand scheme of progress in the life sciences, that something occurred thirty years ago makes it a relatively recent realization. Follow up and debate are still very much in progress. Over the past decade, a debate in the scientific literature occurred over whether the limited human data in fact supported the existence of adult neurogenesis in our own species. Matters appear to have settled to a consensus that human adult neurogenesis does occur. Nonetheless, it remains the case that most of the data for adult neurogenesis is (a) obtained from studies in mice, and (b) focused on the hippocampus, an important region for the function of memory.
Today's open access paper is a brief and readable review on the question of aging and neurogenesis in the hippocampus. Neurogenesis is interesting in this context because, as shown in mice, it declines with age. This is thought to contribute to loss of memory function, and there is a sizable contingent of researchers engaged in trying to boost neurogenesis as a possible basis for future therapies. As this review makes clear, however, after nearly thirty years of work on this topic there are still looming gaps in knowledge everywhere you look.
Extent and activity of adult hippocampal neurogenesis
There is strong evidence for human hippocampal neurogenesis occurring well into adulthood, albeit at a steadily decreasing rate, but we lack a cohesive scientific discourse surrounding its physiological role, particularly the relationship between neurogenic extent and activity. Research emphasis is generally on the former, relying on the assumption that the number of newborn neurons sufficiently explains any functional implications. This approach ignores the reality that individual neurons vary drastically in activity, even in otherwise identical cell populations. This review focuses on the relationship between the extent of neurogenesis and activity of the newborn neurons themselves, with a particular emphasis on how we might use this information to inform future studies.
Adult hippocampal neurogenesis is the process by which new neurons are generated in the dentate gyrus of the hippocampus in the adult brain. The generation of new neurons is a hierarchical, activity-dependent process that starts with radial glia-like precursors that quickly transition to progenitors before eventual differentiation into neuroblasts. This immature neuronal population matures and migrates a short distance from the subgranular zone of the dentate gyrus to the granular layer, where it integrates into pre-existing circuits.
Newly generated neurons progress through dynamic stages important for their normal functioning, finally resulting in behavioral modulation with their integration into hippocampal circuitry. This complex process is regulated by various factors that can increase or decrease neurogenesis, leading to alterations in both the number and function of newly generated neurons. For example, aging is a major physiological factor that contributes to the decline of adult hippocampal neurogenesis by pushing the neural stem cell pool into a quiescent stage and reducing the ability of neural stem cells to proliferate.
Even if the neural stem cells produce new neurons, aging impairs the survival and integration of these newborn neurons into existing circuits. Indeed, aging disrupts the dentate gyrus microenvironment by reducing synaptic density and compromising vascularization, ultimately creating a less supportive niche for neurogenesis. The dentate gyrus plays a critical role in pattern separation and episodic memory, and age-related reductions in hippocampal neurogenesis have been directly linked to cognitive decline; studies show that diminished neurogenesis contributes to impairments in spatial learning, memory precision, and cognitive flexibility, all hallmark features of age-related cognitive decline.