
How Is Our Left Brain Is Different From Our
Right?
ScienceDaily (Nov. 25, 2008) — Since
the historical discovery of the speech center in the left cortex in 150 years
ago, functional differences between left and right hemisphere have been well
known; language is mainly handled by left hemisphere, while spatial
recognition is more specialized to the right hemisphere. However, the
structural differences of synapses underlying left-right difference of the
brain remained unknown.
Japanese research team, led by Prof Ryuichi Shigemoto in National Institute
for Physiological Sciences, Dr Yoshiaki Shinohara and his colleagues found that
synaptic size and shape in the center of the spatial memory (i.e. hippocampus)
were asymmetrical between synapses receiving input from the left and right
hemisphere. Hajime Hirase in Brain Science Institute in RIKEN helped this study,
and it was done under Japan Science Technorogy Agency support.
They investigated the electron microscopic structure of synapses in left and
right hippocampus, and found synapses made by terminals from the right
hippocampus are large, complex in shape, and rich in the GluR1 subunit of AMPA-type
glutamate receptors. In contrast, synapses receiving input from the left
hippocampus are small and rich in the NR2B subunit of NMDA receptors. That
means, both synaptic structure and synaptic molecules differ between synapses
with left and right inputs.
"Long-term potentiaon (LTP), that is known as the cellular mechanism of
learning and memory, depends on the allocation of glutamate receptors in
hippocampus. According to our present finding, synapses receiving right input
may be more suitable to initiate LTP. This finding may help understand how our
left and right brains work differently", said Prof Shigemoto.
This report is published in Proceedings of National Academy of Sciences in
the week of Nov 17, 2008.
Adapted from materials provided by National
Institute for Physiological Sciences, via EurekAlert!,
a service of AAAS.
Back to News