The study of rats found that both males and females lose neurons in
the ventral prefrontal cortex between adolescence and adulthood,
with females losing about 13 percent more neurons in this brain
region than males.
This is the first study to demonstrate that the number of neurons
in the prefrontal cortex decreases during adolescence. It is also
the first to document sex differences in the number of neurons in
the PFC. The study appears in the Feb. 9 issue of the journal
Neuroscience.
Earlier studies in humans have found gradual reductions in the
volume of the prefrontal cortex from adolescence to adulthood, said
psychology professor and principal investigator Janice M. Juraska.
"But the finding that neurons are actually dying is completely new.
This indicates that the brain reorganizes in a very fundamental way
in adolescence."
Juraska, graduate student Julie Markham and undergraduate student
John Morris found that the number of neurons decreased in the
ventral, but not dorsal, prefrontal cortex during adolescence. The
number of glial cells, which surround and support the neurons,
remained stable in the ventral PFC and increased in the dorsal PFC.
These findings challenge current models of brain development by
showing that some parts of the brain are still being organized well
after puberty.
This could have implications for understanding human
psychopathologies, such as schizophrenia, which often arise in late
adolescence, Juraska said.
Other psychological conditions, such as depression, often first
occur in adolescence. And alcohol and nicotine addictions that start
in adolescence are harder to overcome than those that begin in
adulthood, Juraska said.
"We know that experiences are very potent in younger children
because their brains are developing," Juraska said. "So if there is
another time that the brain is changing, then everything that
happens can be written in and magnified more than during stable
times."
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The finding that females lose more neurons in the ventral PFC
than males during adolescence also is new. Juraska had found earlier
that adult female rats had fewer neurons than males in the visual
cortex, a brain region associated with perception. But no other
studies have looked for sex differences in the number of neurons in
the prefrontal cortex.
It is unclear whether sex differences seen in the rat PFC also
occur in humans, Juraska said. One contributing factor may be that
female rats in the wild are almost always pregnant or nursing.
"The metabolic demands on female rats are so heavy that it might
be worthwhile to do away with some very costly cortical cells," she
said. "So this may just be a rodent phenomenon."
The loss of neurons is also a necessary part of brain
development, she said.
"We always think that having more neurons is better, and it might
not be," Juraska said. In some stages of early child development up
to half of the neurons in some brain regions are lost. The pruning
away of unneeded or disruptive neural circuits appears to be as
important to development as the growing of new neural connections,
Juraska said.
Although other researchers had seen reductions in the size of the
cortex, "no one thought neurons were lost, unless some terrible
thing were happening," Juraska said. "Now we are seeing that some
major changes are occurring in adolescence that no one has
suspected."
Juraska is in the Neuroscience Program and is an affiliate of the
Beckman Institute.
[Text from
news
release from the University of Illinois at Urbana-Champaign]
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