We have generated an experimental 'double-hit' model of chronic epilepsy to recapitulate the co-existence of abnormal cortical structure and frequently recurrent seizures as observed in human focal cortical dysplasia. We induced cortical malformations by exposing rats prenatally to methylazoxymethanol acetate and triggered status epilepticus and recurrent seizures in adult methylazoxymethanol acetate rats with pilocarpine. We studied the course of epilepsy and the long-term morphologic and molecular changes induced by the occurrence of status epilepticus and subsequent chronic epilepsy in the malformed methylazoxymethanol acetate exposed brain. Behavioural and electroencephalographic analyses showed that methylazoxymethanol acetate pilocarpine rats develop more severe epilepsy than naïve rats. Morphologic and molecular analyses demonstrated that status epilepticus and subsequent seizures, but not pilocarpine treatment per se, was capable of affecting both cortical architectural and N-methyl-D-aspartate receptor abnormalities induced by methylazoxymethanol acetate. In particular, cortical thickness was further decreased and N-methyl-D-aspartate regulatory subunits were recruited at the postsynaptic membrane. In addition, methylazoxymethanol acetate pilocarpine rats showed abnormally large cortical pyramidal neurons with neurofilament over-expression. These neurons bear similarities to the hypertrophic/dysmorphic pyramidal neurons observed in acquired human focal cortical dysplasia. These data show that status epilepticus sets in motion a pathological process capable of significantly changing the cellular and molecular features of pre-existing experimental cortical malformations. They suggest that seizure recurrence in human focal cortical dysplasia might be an additional factor in establishing a pathological circuitry that favours chronic neuronal hyperexcitability.
Epilepsy is characterized by unpredictable recurrent seizures resulting from abnormal neuronal excitability. Increasing evidence indicates that aberrant astrocyte signaling to neurons plays an important role in driving the network hyperexcitability, but the underlying mechanism that alters glial signaling in epilepsy remains unknown. Increase in glutamate release by astrocytes participates in the onset and progression of seizures. Epileptic seizures are also accompanied by increase of tumor necrosis factor alpha (TNFα), a cytokine involved in the regulation of astrocyte glutamate release. Here we tested whether TNFα controls abnormal astrocyte glutamate signaling in epilepsy and through which mechanism. Combining Ca2+ imaging, optogenetics, and electrophysiology, we report that TNFα triggers a Ca2+‐dependent glutamate release from astrocytes that boosts excitatory synaptic activity in the hippocampus through a mechanism involving autocrine activation of P2Y1 receptors by astrocyte‐derived ATP/ADP. In a mouse model of temporal lobe epilepsy, such TNFα‐driven astrocytic purinergic signaling is permanently active, promotes glial glutamate release, and drives abnormal synaptic activity in the hippocampus. Blocking this pathway by inhibiting P2Y1 receptors restores normal excitatory synaptic activity in the inflamed hippocampus. Our findings indicate that targeting the coupling of TNFα with astrocyte purinergic signaling may be a therapeutic strategy for reducing glial glutamate release and normalizing synaptic activity in epilepsy.
To investigate hypothesized effects of severe epilepsy on malformed cortex, we analyzed surgical samples from eight patients with type IIB focal cortical dysplasia (FCD) in comparison with samples from nine non-dysplastic controls. We investigated, using stereological quantification methods, where appropriate, dysplastic neurons, neuronal density, balloon cells, glia, glutamatergic synaptic input, and the expression of N-methyl-D-aspartate (NMDA) receptor subunits and associated membrane-associated guanylate kinase (MAGUK). In all FCD patients, the dysplastic areas giving rise to epileptic discharges were characterized by larger dysmorphic neurons, reduced neuronal density, and increased glutamatergic inputs, compared to adjacent areas with normal cytology. The duration of epilepsy was found to correlate directly (a) with dysmorphic neuron size, (b) reduced neuronal cell density, and (c) extent of reactive gliosis in epileptogenic/dysplastic areas. Consistent with increased glutamatergic input, western blot revealed that NMDA regulatory subunits and related MAGUK proteins were up-regulated in epileptogenic/dysplastic areas of all FCD patients examined. Taken together, these results support the hypothesis that epilepsy itself alters morphology-and probably also function-in the malformed epileptic brain. They also suggest that glutamate/NMDA/MAGUK dysregulation might be the intracellular trigger that modifies brain morphology and induces cell death.
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