Research funding ERC Consolidator Grant for neuroscientist from Bochum
Backed by funding from the European Research Council, Nikolai Axmacher hopes to find out how the brain manages spatial navigation. The results will also be relevant for Alzheimer’s research.
Professor Nikolai Axmacher from Ruhr-Universität Bochum (RUB) has received a Consolidator Grant from the European Research Council (ERC) for his research on the neuronal basics of spatial navigation in humans. The grant amounts to 2 million euros over five years. Among other things, Axmacher is interested in grid cells that are believed to play a central role in rodent navigation, but whose function in humans is largely unknown. The research could also provide new insights into early brain changes in Alzheimer’s disease.
Precise characterisation of grid cell patterns
In humans, grid cells were found in the entorhinal cortex, a small region deep in the brain that is important for spatial orientation. In functional magnetic resonance imaging, this area shows characteristic grid-like activity patterns. Nikolai Axmacher and his team are hoping to find out how exactly this is related to the activity of individual cells. To this end, the researchers plan to measure the activity of individual cells with thin electrodes that have been inserted into the brains of epilepsy patients for surgical planning. “This method is currently the only way to measure the activity of individual cells in humans,” explains Nikolai Axmacher.
The researchers also intend to determine the patterns of grid cell activity much more precisely than before using high-resolution imaging techniques. “Among other things, we want to understand exactly which role these cells play in spatial navigation and whether they also support other cognitive processes,” outlines Axmacher.
Hoping for early markers of Alzheimer’s disease
Moreover, the researchers are planning to investigate whether altered grid cell patterns are related to pathological changes in Alzheimer’s disease and – if so – whether these processes can be manipulated by drugs. The entorhinal cortex, in which the grid cells are located, is one of the first brain regions to be altered by Alzheimer’s disease. “There is ample evidence that the first brain changes precede clinical symptoms by decades,” says Nikolai Axmacher. “Current research into Alzheimer’s is therefore aiming at gaining a better understanding of these early abnormalities.” For one, the researchers are hoping that an altered grid cell pattern could be an early marker for Alzheimer’s disease.
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