Molecular Detectives

Author: Susanne Donner

We are our memories. But neural firing alone cannot unravel the traces of memory. To do so, researchers must venture into the bubbling cauldron of biochemistry. This is not only relevant for old brains, but especially so.

Scientific support: Prof. Dr. Onur Güntürkün

Published: 01.02.2026

Difficulty: intermediate

In short
  • A Memory trace consists not only of a network of electrical excitation, but also of changes in proteins, epigenetics, and even in the matrix surrounding the nerve cells.
  • One of the central ion channels of learning is the NMDA receptor It controls the communication of nerve cells via synaptic plasticity.
  • The Hormone klotho influences the NMDA Receptor and protects against cognitive decline. It is considered a promising substance against brain aging.
  • The matrix outside the nerve cells also influences learning: during learning, the NMDA receptor initiates its local breakdown and remodeling, allowing a Synapse to sprout or become stronger.
  • A prominent matrix molecule in the adult brain is brevican – a hot candidate for predicting actual brain age from its level in the blood.

Memory

Memory is a generic term for all types of information storage in the organism. In addition to pure retention, this also includes the absorption of information, its organization, and retrieval.

NMDA receptor

NMDA receptors are specialized receptor channels in the membrane of nerve cells that only open under very specific conditions. First, the neurotransmitter glutamate must bind to the receptor, and second, the receptor needs a cofactor such as glycine or D-serine. In addition, the postsynaptic cell membrane must be depolarized so that the magnesium ion (Mg²⁺) normally located in the channel pore is removed. If these conditions are met, an ion channel opens in the center of the receptor and allows calcium ions (Ca²⁺) in particular, but also sodium ions (Na⁺), to flow into the cell, while potassium ions (K⁺) flow out of the cell. The cell can respond to the influx of calcium in a variety of ways. NMDA receptors enable the brain to modify synaptic connections throughout life. They are crucial for forms of synaptic plasticity such as long-term potentiation (LTP) and long-term depression (LTD) and thus play a central role in the formation and storage of memory content.

Plasticity

Neuroplasticity

The term neuroplasticity describes the ability of synapses, nerve cells, and entire areas of the brain to change structurally and functionally depending on the degree to which they are used. Synaptic plasticity refers to the adaptation of the signal transmission strength of synapses to the frequency and intensity of incoming stimuli, for example in the form of long-term potentiation or depression. In addition, the size, interconnection, and activity patterns of different areas of the brain also change depending on their use. This phenomenon is referred to as cortical plasticity when it specifically affects the cortex.

Hormone

Hormones are chemical messengers in the body. They serve to transmit information between organs and cells, usually slowly, e.g., to regulate blood sugar levels. Many hormones are produced in glandular cells and released into the blood. At their destination, e.g., an organ, they dock at binding sites and trigger processes inside the cell. Hormones have a broader effect than neurotransmitters; they can influence various functions in many cells of the body.

Receptor

A receptor is a protein, usually located in the cell membrane or inside the cell, that recognizes a specific external signal (e.g., a neurotransmitter, hormone, or other ligand) and causes the cell to trigger a defined response. Depending on the type of receptor, this response can be excitatory, inhibitory, or modulatory.

Synapse

A synapse is a connection between two neurons and serves as a means of communication between them. It consists of a presynaptic region – the terminal button of the sender neuron – and a postsynaptic region – the region of the receiver neuron with its receptors. Between them lies the synaptic cleft.

Everyone knows that frustrating moment: You know exactly what you want to say, but the right word just won't come to mind. These small, everyday lapses become more frequent with age. This is because the brain also changes over the years and is no longer as efficient as it once was. At least for most of us.

Especially at the end of life, it becomes particularly clear how important a well-functioning brain is. This is when it no longer absorbs new information as readily or even develops gaps. Against this backdrop, researchers want to find out as much as possible about the mechanisms behind Memory. But these mechanisms are proving to be astonishingly diverse. And fragmented.

Experts once hoped to read what is stored in the brain from the electrical concert of nerve cells, its frequency and intensity. There is talk of memory traces and thought imprints. Of specific patterns left behind by firing neurons in the brain. A nerve cell concert – one message: the idea is as simple as it is seductive. But if it were that simple, neuroscience would probably be further ahead. 

Admittedly, the electrical processes do say something about the areas of the brain involved. It is even possible to make statements about which stimuli a nerve cell responds to. But electrophysiology reveals little about the actual content of thoughts and how they are processed. 

Michael Kreutz, a neuroscientist at the Leibniz Institute for Neurobiology in Magdeburg, says: “What we have learned from basic research, especially in the last twenty years, is that it is more complex than we thought.” He and other researchers are therefore delving ever deeper into the biochemistry of the brain with the aim of one day being able to truly read and understand memory traces. 

Memory

Memory is a generic term for all types of information storage in the organism. In addition to pure retention, this also includes the absorption of information, its organization, and retrieval.

A thought is much more than a neuron fire

"We want to read out the associated Gene expression in each cell in the network of nerve cells that are activated in response to a stimulus. The Memory trace is also archived in the cell itself," Kreutz announces. In each affected neuron, the reading pattern - the Epigenetics - of hundreds, if not thousands of genes, changes. This is the reason why we retain many things we remember in the long term. “Once you understand that, you understand memory formation. And above all, why it is so stable,” says Kreutz.

Unraveling the memory trace by recording connectivity and reading gene expression at the single-cell level – “We're not there yet,” he says. The amount of data is huge, the measurement task enormous. This is because a stimulus often activates thousands, if not tens of thousands, of nerve cells in different regions of the brain. The pyramidal cells of the cerebral cortex, for example, which are essential for cognition, can have up to 15,000 synapses, i.e., connections to other nerve cells. Several thousand neurons then communicate with each other. 

Using the method of spatial transcriptomics, researchers can in principle determine the expression of genes in each cell, including their location in the tissue. However, this technique cannot read all 21,000 coding genes at the same time, so researchers have to narrow down what they want to look for to a certain extent.

Gene

Information unit on DNA. Specialized enzymes translate the core component of a gene into ribonucleic acid (RNA). While some ribonucleic acids perform important functions in the cell themselves, others specify the order in which the cell should assemble individual amino acids into a specific protein. The gene thus provides the code for this protein. In addition, a gene also includes regulatory elements on the DNA that ensure that the gene is read exactly when the cell or organism actually needs its product.

Memory

Memory is a generic term for all types of information storage in the organism. In addition to pure retention, this also includes the absorption of information, its organization, and retrieval.

Epigenetics

Biologists use the term "epigenetics" to describe all processes that influence the genetic activity of an organism without changing the sequence of DNA building blocks. This occurs, for example, when the cell chemically modifies certain sections of the genetic material, thereby permanently or temporarily deactivating them. For example, although women have two X chromosomes in every cell of their body, one of them is so tightly packed that it does not become active.

A central ion channel for learning

“We already know important hubs where Gene expression is regulated. The transcription factor CREB, for example, is crucial,” says Kreutz. The CREB protein is controlled by the NMDA receptor, an Ion channel that is fundamental to learning.

NMDA stands for N-methyl-D-aspartate. “The NMDA receptor is a key molecule,” says Kreutz. When we learn something new, it is activated by the Neurotransmitter Glutamate binding to the Receptor. This causes a powerful influx of calcium into the nerve cell. This in turn causes the content of various proteins in the Synapse to change – “in the short, medium, and long term,” emphasizes the neuroscientist. As a result of these changes, the synapse responds differently to the same stimulus than before: it is strengthened or weakened. This transformation of the synapse is believed to be a molecular basis for learning.

The NMDA receptor thus ultimately controls synaptic plasticity, i.e., which nerve cells connect with each other and how intense this exchange is. It therefore plays a key role in the formation of memories and Memory. If the receptor is pharmacologically deactivated in individual areas of the brain in mice, this significantly impairs learning.

The NMDA receptor is often affected in neurodegenerative diseases. Even before cognitive impairments become apparent, animal models of dementia show that the two damage proteins characteristic of the disease, amyloid beta and tau protein, reduce the activity of the ion channel. As a result, the transcription factor CREB is no longer produced. “This is a disaster for plasticity, meaning: a disaster for learning,” emphasizes Kreutz. 

But even without dementia, the expression of the NMDA receptor changes with age, causing it to lose function. Drugs are therefore now even being tested on this crucial ion channel to see if they could help combat memory loss.

Gene

Information unit on DNA. Specialized enzymes translate the core component of a gene into ribonucleic acid (RNA). While some ribonucleic acids perform important functions in the cell themselves, others specify the order in which the cell should assemble individual amino acids into a specific protein. The gene thus provides the code for this protein. In addition, a gene also includes regulatory elements on the DNA that ensure that the gene is read exactly when the cell or organism actually needs its product.

CREB

A transcription factor in the cell nucleus that is activated by cAMP-dependent signaling pathways. CREB influences gene activity and can thus improve communication between two cells. This is a cellular basis for learning processes.

Ion channel

Ion channels are embedded in the cell membrane of nerve cells and all other cells in the body. They enable electrically charged particles, known as ions, to pass through the cell membrane into and out of the cell. They can therefore influence the membrane potential of a cell and trigger an action potential. A large number of different ion channels are known. Normally, ion channels have a specific permeability for only one type of ion, e.g., sodium ions or potassium ions. These are referred to as sodium channels or potassium channels, respectively.

NMDA receptor

NMDA receptors are specialized receptor channels in the membrane of nerve cells that only open under very specific conditions. First, the neurotransmitter glutamate must bind to the receptor, and second, the receptor needs a cofactor such as glycine or D-serine. In addition, the postsynaptic cell membrane must be depolarized so that the magnesium ion (Mg²⁺) normally located in the channel pore is removed. If these conditions are met, an ion channel opens in the center of the receptor and allows calcium ions (Ca²⁺) in particular, but also sodium ions (Na⁺), to flow into the cell, while potassium ions (K⁺) flow out of the cell. The cell can respond to the influx of calcium in a variety of ways. NMDA receptors enable the brain to modify synaptic connections throughout life. They are crucial for forms of synaptic plasticity such as long-term potentiation (LTP) and long-term depression (LTD) and thus play a central role in the formation and storage of memory content.

Neurotransmitter

A neurotransmitter is a chemical messenger, an intermediary substance. It is released by the sender neuron at the sites of cell-cell communication and has an excitatory or inhibitory effect on the receiver neuron.

Glutamate

Glutamate is an amino acid and the most important excitatory neurotransmitter, which acts as a messenger substance in the transmission of information between neurons at their synapses.

Receptor

A receptor is a protein, usually located in the cell membrane or inside the cell, that recognizes a specific external signal (e.g., a neurotransmitter, hormone, or other ligand) and causes the cell to trigger a defined response. Depending on the type of receptor, this response can be excitatory, inhibitory, or modulatory.

Synapse

A synapse is a connection between two neurons and serves as a means of communication between them. It consists of a presynaptic region – the terminal button of the sender neuron – and a postsynaptic region – the region of the receiver neuron with its receptors. Between them lies the synaptic cleft.

Memory

Memory is a generic term for all types of information storage in the organism. In addition to pure retention, this also includes the absorption of information, its organization, and retrieval.

dementia

Dementia

Dementia is an acquired deficit of cognitive, social, motor, and emotional abilities. The most well-known form is Alzheimer's disease. "De mentia" means "without mind" in English.

Klotho – a fountain of youth protein in the brain

Almost every protein that is relevant to cognition also appears to affect the NMDA Ion channel Another prominent molecule in basic research is “klotho.”

In 1997, Japanese researchers discovered the protein in mice. Without it, the animals aged prematurely. They developed osteoporosis, calcified arteries, and other typical signs of aging. The pioneers named it after a mythical Greek figure who spins the thread of life: “Klotho”.

It is now clear that the substance is a Hormone produced in the adrenal cortex, but also in the brain. It exists in three different variants, which differ slightly in their protein structure.

Klotho cannot cross the Blood-brain barrier Nevertheless, the molecule is considered an interesting candidate in the fight against age-related brain disorders. This is because the level of the alpha form of this protein in the blood naturally decreases with age, and the lower the level, the poorer the cognitive abilities are on average. 

When administered artificially, alpha-klotho prolongs lifespan by up to 30 percent in animal experiments. When injected under the skin of older rhesus monkeys once, their cognitive abilities improve in the following two weeks. The substance protects against mental decline and promotes the formation of synapses. Klotho is therefore considered a prominent candidate in pharmaceutical research for slowing down brain aging.

“We have just discovered that klotho also binds to the NMDA receptor and alters the expression of proteins in the synapse, but only in a very specific area of the brain and in certain nerve cells,” Kreutz announces in one of his upcoming publications. 

Ion channel

Ion channels are embedded in the cell membrane of nerve cells and all other cells in the body. They enable electrically charged particles, known as ions, to pass through the cell membrane into and out of the cell. They can therefore influence the membrane potential of a cell and trigger an action potential. A large number of different ion channels are known. Normally, ion channels have a specific permeability for only one type of ion, e.g., sodium ions or potassium ions. These are referred to as sodium channels or potassium channels, respectively.

Hormone

Hormones are chemical messengers in the body. They serve to transmit information between organs and cells, usually slowly, e.g., to regulate blood sugar levels. Many hormones are produced in glandular cells and released into the blood. At their destination, e.g., an organ, they dock at binding sites and trigger processes inside the cell. Hormones have a broader effect than neurotransmitters; they can influence various functions in many cells of the body.

Blood-brain barrier

A selectively permeable membrane formed by cells in the walls of the capillary blood vessels in the brain. It protects the brain from harmful substances in the blood, but allows nutrients and oxygen to pass from the blood into the brain.

NMDA receptor

NMDA receptors are specialized receptor channels in the membrane of nerve cells that only open under very specific conditions. First, the neurotransmitter glutamate must bind to the receptor, and second, the receptor needs a cofactor such as glycine or D-serine. In addition, the postsynaptic cell membrane must be depolarized so that the magnesium ion (Mg²⁺) normally located in the channel pore is removed. If these conditions are met, an ion channel opens in the center of the receptor and allows calcium ions (Ca²⁺) in particular, but also sodium ions (Na⁺), to flow into the cell, while potassium ions (K⁺) flow out of the cell. The cell can respond to the influx of calcium in a variety of ways. NMDA receptors enable the brain to modify synaptic connections throughout life. They are crucial for forms of synaptic plasticity such as long-term potentiation (LTP) and long-term depression (LTD) and thus play a central role in the formation and storage of memory content.

The secret of the matrix: The environment of nerve cells influences cognition

Neurochemist Constanze Seidenbecher from the Leibniz Institute for Neurobiology in Magdeburg was also searching for new proteins in the brain when, in the 1990s, almost simultaneously with other scientists, she discovered brevican – a protein with long sugar chains. Such proteoglycans were already well known from other tissues, but not from the brain. In other organs, they typically make up the extracellular matrix, i.e., the supporting structures that surround the cells. “But at that time, it was thought that there was no extracellular matrix in the brain. After all, the brain is soft and does not need to be supported, as it floats in Cerebrospinal fluid under the robust skull.”

However, it gradually became clear that the nerve cells in the brain are also surrounded by a network of extracellular matrix. The matrix actually accounts for up to 25 percent of the brain's volume. The nerve cells themselves, but especially the glial cells, produce the three-dimensional network of proteoglycans. This ensures that messenger substances such as glutamate, which are released at a synapse, do not diffuse too far away but act locally. “The matrix collects ions and messenger substances on site and releases them again directly,” explains Seidenbecher. The extracellular matrix thus has an important buffering and storage function.

Cerebrospinal fluid

liquor cerebrospinalis

A clear fluid that fills the ventricular system and bathes the brain and spinal cord in the subarachnoid space, protecting them from impact. Three to five times a day, 100 to 160 ml of fluid is renewed by the choroid plexus. Certain diseases are reflected in the composition of the cerebrospinal fluid.

When the matrix disappears, there is room for new learning material

In her experiments on brain sections from mice, Seidenbecher can also artificially break down the matrix of proteoglycans by adding enzymes such as hyaluronidase or chondroitinase. These enzymes split off the sugars, releasing the proteoglycans from the network. Surprisingly, removing the matrix around the nerve cells has a significant effect on the synapses and thus on learning – they become more plastic and strengthen.

This is exactly what happens when we learn something new: the matrix around a synapse, including the prominent molecule brevican, is broken down to allow the Synapse to expand. This process is initiated by an external stimulus: and once again, it is the NMDA receptor that triggers the release of matrix-degrading enzymes. “The Receptor is the chef and the matrix is the waiter,” Seidenbecher illustrates.

Who would have thought it: part of the secret of how we learn lies not within, but actually outside the nerve cells. When space is created there by loosening the extracellular matrix, we can learn new things more easily. Synapses sprout or expand.

Seidenbecher's colleagues were able to demonstrate the relevance of the matrix particularly impressively in desert gerbils. These rodents have extremely good hearing. The researchers were able to teach them to jump over a hurdle as soon as they heard a whistle with a rising pitch. When they heard a descending whistle, however, they were supposed to remain seated. “They learned this very quickly,” reports Seidenbecher.

However, when the researchers reversed the rule and expected the trained mice to jump when they heard a descending tone, the animals struggled. But after injecting a small amount of a matrix-degrading enzyme into the mice's auditory cortex, the rodents were able to relearn quickly. “Without forgetting the old rule,” reports Seidenbecher.

“In the brain, there is an interplay between stability – meaning that I don't forget who I am – and flexibility – meaning that I can learn new things,” says the researcher. This interplay is largely organized by the extracellular matrix. 

Synapse

A synapse is a connection between two neurons and serves as a means of communication between them. It consists of a presynaptic region – the terminal button of the sender neuron – and a postsynaptic region – the region of the receiver neuron with its receptors. Between them lies the synaptic cleft.

NMDA receptor

NMDA receptors are specialized receptor channels in the membrane of nerve cells that only open under very specific conditions. First, the neurotransmitter glutamate must bind to the receptor, and second, the receptor needs a cofactor such as glycine or D-serine. In addition, the postsynaptic cell membrane must be depolarized so that the magnesium ion (Mg²⁺) normally located in the channel pore is removed. If these conditions are met, an ion channel opens in the center of the receptor and allows calcium ions (Ca²⁺) in particular, but also sodium ions (Na⁺), to flow into the cell, while potassium ions (K⁺) flow out of the cell. The cell can respond to the influx of calcium in a variety of ways. NMDA receptors enable the brain to modify synaptic connections throughout life. They are crucial for forms of synaptic plasticity such as long-term potentiation (LTP) and long-term depression (LTD) and thus play a central role in the formation and storage of memory content.

Receptor

A receptor is a protein, usually located in the cell membrane or inside the cell, that recognizes a specific external signal (e.g., a neurotransmitter, hormone, or other ligand) and causes the cell to trigger a defined response. Depending on the type of receptor, this response can be excitatory, inhibitory, or modulatory.

Matrix celebrity Brevican predicts brain age

With increasing age, however, the matrix becomes less soluble and less flexible. Some components, such as the proteoglycan brevican, decrease. Astrocytes produce less and less of it and instead release cytokines that summon the immune system and initiate a latent inflammatory process. This is unfavorable – and a characteristic of aging. It is also bad news for mental abilities.

Seidenbecher has already proven that the more brevican people have in their blood, the better they perform on Memory and thinking tasks. The molecule outside the nerve cells is now considered a hot candidate for predicting the actual, function-related age of the brain in relation to biological age. Among nearly 3,000 proteins analyzed in the blood, it is one of the substances most closely associated with dementia, strokes, and mobility. More brevican means greater mental fitness. 

“Sometimes I am asked if I would inject enzymes into my own brain to break down the extracellular matrix in order to learn new things faster,” says Seidenbecher. “For heaven's sake,” she replies. “That's a sledgehammer approach, and no one knows what the gerbils have lost at the expense of faster relearning.” 

The neurochemist prefers to stick to her other research findings. In addition to genes, the level of brevican is significantly influenced by lifestyle: not smoking, not being overweight, and not having too much body fat are good for the protective substance in the brain. 

Memory

Memory is a generic term for all types of information storage in the organism. In addition to pure retention, this also includes the absorption of information, its organization, and retrieval.

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