This past Saturday, we took a three-hour bus ride from Paris
to the Loire Valley to visit two famous chateaus: the Château de Villandry and the Château de
Chenonceau. Château de Villandry
especially caught my attention because despite its rather plain exterior
compared to other chateaus. It has one of the most beautifully designed
gardens. Château de Villandry have a
long history since the 14th century, but most recently, Joachim
Carvallo, a Spanish doctor and researcher, bought the property in 1906. As we
stood on the upper levels of the chateau, I was amazed by the geometric designs
of the decorative gardens that represented tender, passionate, fickle, and
tragic love. Carvallo renovated the château
and designed medicinal gardens to further his research. In addition to the medicinal herb garden,
there are also flower gardens, vegetable gardens, and waters gardens, which are
representative of renaissance style chateaus.
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Garden in the Chateau de Villandry |
The medicinal herb garden is farther away from the main
building because it was built in the 1970s by Carvallo’s grandson according to
his original design. The garden contains
various different types of herbs, roots, and leaves that have therapeutic
properties. As I was meandering through
the garden slowly, a slight scent of minty lemon caught my attention. The scent originated from a little bush with
green leaves that resembled the shape of mint leaves. A little web browsing showed that the plant
is called lemon balm, or Melissa
officinalis. Lemon balm is usually
used to make herbal tea, which I don’t particularly like. However, since Carvallo chose to have lemon
balm planted in his herb garden, I am curious to find out the beneficial
effects of this nice smelling plant.
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Decorative garden representing different types of love |
Lemon balm has various therapeutic properties ranging from lowering
anxiety to treating Alzheimer’s disease (Maguire et al.). Among many studies investigating possible usages of lemon
balm for treating different diseases, a study on lemon balm extract’s ability
to induce neurogenesis in dentate gyrus of hippocampus, an area of the brain
that is responsible for forming new memories, seems particularly promising for
treating many memory related diseases such as Alzheimer’s (Yoo et al., 2011). Neurogenesis in the dentate gyrus focuses on
the formation of granule cells, a cell type that is thought to be responsible
for spatial memories (Colicos and Dash, 1996). The process of neurogenesis starts with the
proliferation of granule cell progenitors in the subgranular zone, which then
migrate to the granule cell layer where the new granule neuronal cells are made
(Yoo et al., 2011).
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The town of Villandry |
To see if lemon balm actually promotes neurogenesis, Yoo et
al. set up three groups of mice. The first
group was fed with 50mg/kg lemon balm extract, the second group received a
higher dose of 200mg/kg, and the last group is a control group in which the
mice were fed with distilled water (Yoo et al., 2011). All three groups were fed once a day for 21
days. To track the effect of lemon balm
on neurogenesis in the dentate gyrus, we have to monitor several proteins that
are produced as by-products of neurogenesis.
Ki-67 is a protein that will be present in the cellular nucleus during
cell proliferation. DCX, another
protein, is expressed in immature neurons, which is indicative of new neuron
formation. To see if these proteins are
made in the dentate gyrus, antibodies that will attach themselves specifically
to these two proteins were used. To
quantify how many antibodies are attached to these two proteins, a stain was
performed on sections of the dentate gyrus after the antibodies were
administered.
The results of this study is astonishing in which there is a
7-fold increase in the level of Ki-67 in the mice group that received 200mg/kg
lemon balm compared to the control group that received water. Similarly, there is also significant increase
in the level of neurons expressing DCX in the dentate gyrus for the two
experimental groups that received lemon balm extract. The combined increases in expression of these
two proteins indicate that neurogenesis of granule cells are increased due to
the intake of lemon balm extract by the mice.
Although there are still many differences between mice and
human, I think it wouldn’t hurt to drink some lemon balm tea once in a
while. If granule cell neurogenesis can
be induced by lemon balm extract as suggested by the mouse model, drinking some
lemon balm tea might actually improve my spatial memory and help me navigate
through the complex RER and metro system in Paris!
References:
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