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So, how do brains achieve self-avoidance? The answer, according to a new Nature paper building on previous work, is a clever mechanism involving a single protein, Dscam1. The DNA code which produces it contains three sections (exons), which can each vary in several ways. There are 12 variants of exon 4, 48 of exon 6, and 33 of exon 9.
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If a growing neuronal branch encounters another branch with the same Dscam1 isoform, the two identical proteins interact and the branches repel each other. Because every part of any given cell expresses the same "fingerprint", this produces self-avoidance. But the chance that another neighbouring cell will have the same protein is very small. There are billions of neurones in the brain, so many will share the same protein, but the chance of a cell encountering another nearby with the identical fingerprint is tiny.
In this paper, the authors genetically engineered fruit flies (Drosophila) so that they had fewer than the normal 19,008 Dscam1 variants. (Previous work suggests that the system is similar in mammals.) Flies with 4,752 variants developed normally, but with only 1,152, problems arose: neurones got repelled from other nearby neurones because they shared the same protein. With 576, 24, or 12 isoforms, the problem became progressively worse, as the chance of two cells having the same isoform rose.
So, in order to avoid tying themselves in knots, brains need somewhere between about one thousand and five thousand Dscam1 variants. It's an elegant solution to the problem of neurite self-avoidance, and a lovely example of evolution at work.
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