Tel Aviv University neuroscientists find link between getting used to an odor and brain activity and diseases

And Hashem did as Moshe asked; the frogs died out in the houses, the courtyards, and the fields. And they piled them up in heaps, till the land stank.

Exodus

8:

9

(the israel bible)

January 5, 2022

3 min read

Dr. Moshe Parnas (courtesy)

Have you noticed that a few minutes after you enter a room with a distinct odor, you stop smelling it.  A substance named G-protein that is involved in habituation (getting used to) an odor. 

 

For the first time, scientists at Tel Aviv University (TAU) have discovered a direct and significant link between changes in G-protein-coupled receptors (GPCRs) and the brain’s ability to adapt to external changes, thus they found a link between electrical voltage and brain flexibility. 

 

Their study, published recently in the prestigious journal Nature Communications, was conducted by Dr. Moshe Parnas and his team from TAU’s Sackler Faculty of Medicine and the Sagol School of Neuroscience. 

 

Our brain has a large amount of GPCRs. Activation of these proteins causes a chain of chemical reactions within the cell. These proteins are very common in the brain and involved in almost every brain activity, such as learning and memory. 

 

The nerve cells in which GPCRs are common undergo experience changes in their electrical voltage. Two decades ago, it was unexpectedly discovered that GPCRs are voltage-dependent, meaning that they sense the changes in the electrical voltage of nerve cells and change their function, which is voltage-dependent, but until now, it has not been clarified whether the voltage dependence of GPCR proteins has a physiological significance that affects brain activity, our perception, and behavior. In fact, scientists believed that this voltage dependence has no physiological significance. 

 

Parnas and his team investigated, by means of the olfactory (smell) system of the fruit fly, whether the voltage dependence of GPCRs is important for brain function. To this end, the researchers decided to focus on one receptor from the GPCR family called Muscarinic Type A. This protein is involved, among others, in habituation to an odor, a process in which the intensity of the reaction to the odor decreases as a result of continuous exposure to it. Thanks to this mechanism, a few minutes after entering a room containing a distinct odor – we stop smelling it. 

 

“Nerve cells are able to communicate with each other and brain flexibility is expressed in the ability of nerve cells to set up new connections with each other and change existing connections – and thus influence behavior,” explained Parnas. “Muscarinic Type A protein is involved in strengthening the bond between nerve cells, and strengthening of this bond causes fruit flies to get used to the odor and indicates normal brain flexibility.”

 

During the course of the study, the researchers were able to neutralize the voltage sensor of the Type A Muscarinic protein using genetic editing and thus eliminate its dependence on the electrical voltage of the nerve cell.  The researchers found, by applying molecular, genetic and physiological methods, that disabling the voltage sensor actually causes uncontrolled brain flexibility and consequently the process of excessive and uncontrolled habituating to an odor. 

 

“We found that the receptor in question is very much involved in strengthening the intercellular bond in the brain, much more than what we thought. When we turned off its voltage sensor, the connection between the nerve cells became too strong. These findings change our perception of G-protein-coupled receptors. To date, no reference has been made to the effect of electrical voltage on their function and its implications on brain flexibility and conduct. These receptors are involved in many systems and brain diseases and we have now discovered a control mechanism upon which an attempt at drug treatment can be based. Following this, we are continuing to investigate additional receptors. It is reasonable to assume that their dependence on the electrical voltage is important in other systems and not only in the olfactory system.”

 

Interestingly, his study is a follow-up to a study conducted by his parents, Prof. Hanna Parnas and the late Prof. Itzchak Parnas about two decades ago. They were the first to find that GPCR receptors can sense electrical voltage in cells but their research remained solely at the protein level. The current study advances to the next stage, connecting molecules, brain and conduct and indicating, for the first time, that eliminating their ability to sense electrical voltage affects brain activity and our ability to optimally adapt to the environment. 

The shortcode is missing a valid Donation Form ID attribute.

 

 

Register to Vote

JOIN MORE THAN

1300

registered voters!

If you would like to stop the threat of a Palestinian State in the heartland of Israel, vote for Israel365 in the upcoming World Zionist Congress elections taking place from March 10-May 4, 2025. Please submit your information and we will remind you to vote during the voting period!
* To be eligible to vote you must be a Jewish US citizen who is 18+ with primary residency in the US.

Share this article

Subscribe

Prophecy from the Bible is revealing itself as we speak. Israel365 News is the only media outlet reporting on it.

Sign up to our free daily newsletter today to get all the most important stories directly to your inbox. See how the latest updates in Jerusalem and the world are connected to the prophecies we read in the Bible. .