The brain’s molecular memory code revealed?

CaMKII activated by synaptic calcium influx extends 6 kinase domains above
and below a central domain. The insect-like CaMKII binds to a microtubule,
its 6 kinase domains precisely matching, binding to, and collectively
phosphorylating 6 tubulins in the hexagonal lattice. CaMKII departs,
leaving a memory trace which evolves and computes in the microtubule
lattice. (Craddock et al, PLoS Computational Biology, in press)
Memory depends on variable synaptic connection strengths among brain
neurons, channeling activity through specific network pathways. But synaptic
components are short-lived and frequently re-cycled, and yet memories
can last lifetimes, suggesting encoding of synaptic information and memory
at a deeper, finer-grained molecular scale, something akin to the genetic code
in DNA. In a paper to appear in the journal PLoS Computational Biology,
physicists Travis Craddock and Jack Tuszynski of the University of Alberta,
and anesthesiologist Stuart Hameroff of the University of Arizona put forth a
plausible mechanism for encoding synaptic memory in microtubules, major
components of the cytoskeleton within neurons.
Microtubules govern neuronal growth, regulate synapses and are composed
of ‘tubulin’ proteins which self-assemble into cylindrical hexagonal lattices.
Generally considered as merely bone-like structural girders, microtubule lattices
have also been proposed to process information via dynamic interactive states
of tubulins. But any semblance of a common code connecting synaptic activity
to microtubule processes has been missing. Until now.
The best experimental model for neuronal memory.is long term potentiation
(LTP) in which intense, brief pre-synaptic excitation results in prolonged post-synaptic
sensitivity. An essential player in LTP is the hexagonal enzyme calcium/calmodulin-dependent
protein kinase II (CaMKII). Upon pre-synaptic excitation, calcium ions entering
post-synaptic neurons cause the snowflake-shaped CaMKII to transform, extending
sets of 6 leg-like kinase domains above and below a central domain, the activated
CaMKII resembling a double-sided insect. Each kinase domain can phosphorylate a
substrate, and thus encode one ‘bit’ of synaptic information. Ordered arrays of bits
are termed ‘bytes’, and each CaMKII can thus phosphorylate and encode calcium-mediated
synaptic inputs as 6-bit information bytes. But where is the intra-neuronal substrate
for memory encoding by CaMKII phosphorylation? Enter microtubules.
Using molecular modeling, Craddock et al show a precise match between the spatial
dimensions, geometry and electrostatics of the insect-like CaMKII, and hexagonal lattices
of tubulin proteins in microtubules. They show how CaMKII kinase domains can
collectively bind and phosphorylate 6-bit information bytes, resulting in hexagonally-based
patterns of phosphorylated tubulins in microtubules. They calculate enormous information
capacity at extremely low energy cost, and provide mechanisms by which patterns of
phosphorylated tubulins in microtubules can influence axonal firings, regulate synapses, and
traverse scale.
Microtubules and CaMKII are ubiquitous in eukaryotic biology, and apparently able
to function as solid state information processors organizing real-time cellular functions,
complementing the more static genetic information in DNA. Decoding microtubule
bits and bytes could enable therapeutic intervention in a host of pathological processes,
for example Alzheimers disease in which microtubule disruption plays a key role, and
brain injury in which microtubule activities can repair neurons and synapses.
Hameroff, senior author on the study, said: “Many neuroscience papers conclude by
claiming their findings may help understand how the brain works, and treat Alzheimers,
brain injury and various neurological and psychiatric disorders. This study may actually
do that.”
PLoS Computational Biology (in press)
Cytoskeletal signaling: Is memory encoded in microtubule lattices by CaMKII phosphorylation?
Travis J. A. Craddock1, Jack A. Tuszynski1, 2, and Stuart Hameroff3
1Department of Physics, University of Alberta, Edmonton, AB, Canada
2Departments of Oncology, Cross Cancer Institute, Edmonton, AB, Canada
3Departments of Anesthesiology and Psychology, Center for Consciousness Studies,
University of Arizona, Tucson, AZ, USA