
SENDING SIGNALSThis image shows a brain cell as it responds to an electrical stimulus. The blue traces the path of the signal and its transmission through synapses to the brain cell.Michael A. Colicos, University of Calgary
Men are dense — in the temporal neocortex anyway.
An investigation of brain tissue recovered from epilepsy
patients during surgery showed men had a higher density of brain cell
connectors, called synapses, than their female counterparts, researchers report
September 8 online in the Proceedings of
the National Academy of Sciences.
The find might explain why men have better spatial
perception, while women better remember what they hear and can talk faster, the
researchers suggest.
“Or, it could mean men’s brains are just more redundant,”
says Edward Jones, director of the Center for Neuroscience at the University of California,
Davis, who was
not involved in the study. Right now, it’s hard to know exactly what the
difference means, he says.
For many years, scientists have searched for structural variations
between men’s and women’s brains to explain psychological studies showing that,
overall, the sexes think and act differently. Past studies found differences in
brain mass and neuron density, but “they were hyped and untrustworthy,” Jones
says.
This study is meticulously detailed, he notes. It is the
first to show gender differences on such a fine scale — at the synapse, which
is the juncture where an electrical signal passes from one brain cell to
another. “The level of detail and meticulousness are why I have confidence in
the results,” he says.
To measure the difference in synapse density, four Spanish
scientists studied brain tissue taken from eight patients, four men and four
women. The patients were having surgery on the hippocampus regions of their
brains to treat epileptic seizures. As part of the procedure, tissue from the
temporal neocortex was extracted, along with the culprit hippocampus tissue.
The temporal neocortex is related to speech,
memory and hearing. Tests showed that the temporal tissue was not affected by
the patients’ epilepsy, the researchers report.
The team then analyzed the temporal tissue with an electron
microscope. All the samples had similar numbers and densities of neurons, as
well as similar thicknesses throughout the six layers of tissue. The only
difference by gender was synapse density. The four men had, on average, 33
percent more synapses per cubic millimeter of tissue, says study coauthor
Javier DeFelipe of the Cajal Institute in Madrid,
Spain.
“But, the sample size is small,” comments Karl Zilles of the
Institute of Neurosciences
and Biophysics in Jülich, Germany. And, he adds, epilepsy
leads to synapse changes even outside the epileptic focus. So, undetected changes
could have occurred in the synapses of the temporal neocortex.
DeFelipe admits that this study is a first step and only
focuses on one area of the brain. Women’s brains could have a higher synapse
density in other regions, he explains.
“Given the challenges, like getting fresh tissue, it is great
work,” but more research is needed, Zilles says.
Jones notes, though, that the epilepsy treatment that
produced the samples for this study is becoming more common. “I just hope the
results encourage researchers to start taking a look at that available tissue,”
he says.
Found in: Body & Brain
Something like 90% of males have frontal lobes that have shrunk dramatically by the age of 50. Males have on average much larger frontal lobes at the age of 20-25.
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