Today.Az » Weird / Interesting » Aging brains are different in humans and chimpanzees; Evolution of human longevity led to both a large brain and brain shrinkage
28 July 2011 [20:00] - Today.Az
Brains shrink in humans, potentially causing a number of health problems and mental illnesses as people age, but do they shrink to the same extent in the closest living relatives to humans--the chimpanzees?
New research says no, making the extreme amount of brain shrinkage resulting from normal aging in humans unique.
Chet Sherwood, an anthropologist at The George Washington University
in Washington, D.C., and a team of scientists from seven other U.S.
universities put forward the question to see if comparable data on the
effects of aging could be found in chimpanzees. Such data on regional
brain volumes in chimpanzees was not available, until now.
The researchers--anthropologists, neuroscientists, psychologists,
biologists, and veterinary professionals--used magnetic resonance
imaging (MRI) to measure the space occupied by various brain structures
in adult humans and chimpanzees, including the frontal lobe and the
hippocampus, an area of the brain associated with short-term and
long-term memory.
They found chimpanzees do not display significant loss, or atrophy,
in the size of their brains and other internal structures as they age.
Instead, Sherwood and colleagues suggest that as humans evolved the
ability to live longer, the result was a "high degree of brain
degeneration" as people get older.
"We were most surprised that chimpanzees, who are separated from
humans by only 6-8 million years of independent evolution, did not more
closely resemble the human pattern of brain aging," said Sherwood. "It
was already known that macaque monkeys, separated from humans by about
30 million years, do not show humanlike, widespread brain atrophy in
aging."
The current issue of Proceedings of the National Academy of Sciences reports the findings. The National Science Foundation (NSF) partially funded the research.
Because humans and chimpanzees grow, develop and age on different
schedules, the study compared humans from age 22 to 88 and chimpanzees
from age 10 to 51. For both species, this encompassed the whole adult
lifespan under natural conditions. Humans have a longer lifespan than
chimpanzees. In the wild, the lifespan of chimpanzees is about 45 at the
oldest. With medical care in captivity, they can live into their 60s.
On the other hand, humans without access to modern medical care and who
live in traditional hunter-gatherer societies can live to their mid-80s.
The researchers used MRI to measure the volume of the whole brain,
total neocortical gray matter, total neocortical white matter, frontal
lobe gray matter, frontal lobe white matter and the hippocampus in a
cross-sectional sample of 99 chimpanzees and 87 adult humans.
"Traits that distinguish humans from other primates include
enlargement of the brain and increased longevity," they write in the
report "Aging of the Cerebral Cortex Differs Between Humans and
Chimpanzees."
Consequently, they say, humans are unique among animals in being
susceptible to certain neuropathologies, such as Alzheimer's disease, in
the later stages of life. Even in the absence of disease, however,
healthy aging in humans is marked by variable degrees of neural
deterioration and cognitive impairment.
"This is an excellent example of research that has implications for
societal benefits," said NSF Physical Anthropology Program Officer Kaye
Reed. "While Dr. Sherwood and colleagues are interested in the
evolutionary significance of brain differences between chimpanzees and
humans, the results of this research can be used as a basis to explore
degenerative brain diseases, such as Alzheimer's, in a medical context."
"This research points to the uniqueness of how severe brain aging is
in humans," said Sherwood. "While there are certainly many similarities
between humans and other animals in the degenerative processes that
occur in the brain, our research indicates that even healthy, normal
aging in humans involves more pronounced brain deterioration than in
other species.
"Taken together with particular environmental and genetic risk
factors, this might help to explain the fact that only humans are
vulnerable to developing dementing illnesses like Alzheimer's disease in
old age."
Sherwood and colleagues conclude evolution led to both a large brain
and a long lifespan in humans. They point out that the benefits of these
traits are much debated, but they surmise it might be related to an
increased reliance on social learning of skills.
"As a result, we suggest that the high energy cost of a large brain
in humans leads to more wear and tear that cannot be easily repaired
because most neurons are not renewed," said Sherwood. "As a consequence,
human brains become more vulnerable to degeneration towards the later
stages of life."
In addition to NSF, the National Institutes of Health, the James S.
McDonnell Foundation, the Mathers Foundation and a Yerkes Center Grant
supported the research. /Science Daily/
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