Early-life status epilepticus induces ectopic granule cells in adult mice dentate gyrus

2008 ◽  
Vol 211 (2) ◽  
pp. 503-510 ◽  
Author(s):  
Rieko Muramatsu ◽  
Yuji Ikegaya ◽  
Norio Matsuki ◽  
Ryuta Koyama
Epilepsia ◽  
2004 ◽  
Vol 45 (1) ◽  
pp. 13-19 ◽  
Author(s):  
Brenda E. Porter ◽  
Margaret Maronski ◽  
Amy R. Brooks-Kayal

1999 ◽  
Vol 82 (4) ◽  
pp. 1883-1894 ◽  
Author(s):  
Péter Molnár ◽  
J. Victor Nadler

Dentate granule cells become synaptically interconnected in the hippocampus of persons with temporal lobe epilepsy, forming a recurrent mossy fiber pathway. This pathway may contribute to the development and propagation of seizures. The physiology of mossy fiber–granule cell synapses is difficult to characterize unambiguously, because electrical stimulation may activate other pathways and because there is a low probability of granule cell interconnection. These problems were addressed by the use of scanning laser photostimulation in slices of the caudal hippocampal formation. Glutamate was released from a caged precursor with highly focused ultraviolet light to evoke action potentials in a small population of granule cells. Excitatory synaptic currents were recorded in the presence of bicuculline. Minimal laser photostimulation evoked an apparently unitary excitatory postsynaptic current (EPSC) in 61% of granule cells from rats that had experienced pilocarpine-induced status epilepticus followed by recurrent mossy fiber growth. An EPSC was also evoked in 13–16% of granule cells from the control groups. EPSCs from status epilepticus and control groups had similar peak amplitudes (∼30 pA), 20–80% rise times (∼1.2 ms), decay time constants (∼10 ms), and half-widths (∼8 ms). The mean failure rate was high (∼70%) in both groups, and in both groups activation of N-methyl-d-aspartate receptors contributed a small component to the EPSC. The strong similarity between responses from the status epilepticus and control groups suggests that they resulted from activation of a similar synaptic population. No EPSC was recorded when the laser beam was focused in the dentate hilus, suggesting that indirect activation of hilar mossy cells contributed little, if at all, to these results. Recurrent mossy fiber growth increases the density of mossy fiber–granule cell synapses in the caudal dentate gyrus by perhaps sixfold, but the new synapses appear to operate very similarly to preexisting mossy fiber–granule cell synapses.


2009 ◽  
Vol 102 (2) ◽  
pp. 670-681 ◽  
Author(s):  
Ren-Zhi Zhan ◽  
J. Victor Nadler

In temporal lobe epilepsy, loss of inhibitory neurons and circuit changes in the dentate gyrus promote hyperexcitability. This hyperexcitability is compensated to the point that dentate granule cells exhibit normal or even subnormal excitability under some conditions. This study explored the possibility that compensation involves enhanced tonic GABA inhibition. Whole cell patch-clamp recordings were made from normotopic granule cells in hippocampal slices from control rats and from both normotopic and hilar ectopic granule cells in slices from rats subjected to pilocarpine-induced status epilepticus. After status epilepticus, tonic GABA current was an order of magnitude greater than control in normotopic granule cells and was significantly greater in hilar ectopic than in normotopic granule cells. These differences could be observed whether or not the extracellular GABA concentration was increased by adding GABA to the superfusion medium or blocking plasma membrane transport. The enhanced tonic GABA current had both action potential–dependent and action potential–independent components. Pharmacological studies suggested that the small tonic GABA current of granule cells in control rats was mediated largely by high-affinity α4βxδ GABAA receptors but that the much larger current recorded after status epilepticus was mediated largely by the lower-affinity α5βxγ2 GABAA receptors. A large α5βxγ2-mediated tonic current could be recorded from controls only when the extracellular GABA concentration was increased. Status epilepticus seemed not to impair the control of extracellular GABA concentration by plasma membrane transport substantially. Upregulated tonic GABA inhibition may account for the unexpectedly modest excitability of the dentate gyrus in epileptic brain.


1999 ◽  
Vol 81 (4) ◽  
pp. 1645-1660 ◽  
Author(s):  
Maxine M. Okazaki ◽  
Péter Molnár ◽  
J. Victor Nadler

Recurrent mossy fiber pathway in rat dentate gyrus: synaptic currents evoked in presence and absence of seizure-induced growth. A common feature of temporal lobe epilepsy and of animal models of epilepsy is the growth of hippocampal mossy fibers into the dentate molecular layer, where at least some of them innervate granule cells. Because the mossy fibers are axons of granule cells, the recurrent mossy fiber pathway provides monosynaptic excitatory feedback to these neurons that could facilitate seizure discharge. We used the pilocarpine model of temporal lobe epilepsy to study the synaptic responses evoked by activating this pathway. Whole cell patch-clamp recording demonstrated that antidromic stimulation of the mossy fibers evoked an excitatory postsynaptic current (EPSC) in ∼74% of granule cells from rats that had survived >10 wk after pilocarpine-induced status epilepticus. Recurrent mossy fiber growth was demonstrated with the Timm stain in all instances. In contrast, antidromic stimulation of the mossy fibers evoked an EPSC in only 5% of granule cells studied 4–6 days after status epilepticus, before recurrent mossy fiber growth became detectable. Notably, antidromic mossy fiber stimulation also evoked an EPSC in many granule cells from control rats. Clusters of mossy fiber-like Timm staining normally were present in the inner third of the dentate molecular layer at the level of the hippocampal formation from which slices were prepared, and several considerations suggested that the recorded EPSCs depended mainly on activation of recurrent mossy fibers rather than associational fibers. In both status epilepticus and control groups, the antidromically evoked EPSC was glutamatergic and involved the activation of both AMPA/kainate and N-methyl-d-aspartate (NMDA) receptors. EPSCs recorded in granule cells from rats with recurrent mossy fiber growth differed in three respects from those recorded in control granule cells: they were much more frequently evoked, a number of them were unusually large, and the NMDA component of the response was generally much more prominent. In contrast to the antidromically evoked EPSC, the EPSC evoked by stimulation of the perforant path appeared to be unaffected by a prior episode of status epilepticus. These results support the hypothesis that recurrent mossy fiber growth and synapse formation increases the excitatory drive to dentate granule cells and thus facilitates repetitive synchronous discharge. Activation of NMDA receptors in the recurrent pathway may contribute to seizure propagation under depolarizing conditions. Mossy fiber-granule cell synapses also are present in normal rats, where they may contribute to repetitive granule cell discharge in regions of the dentate gyrus where their numbers are significant.


2005 ◽  
Vol 5 (6) ◽  
pp. 231-233 ◽  
Author(s):  
Jack M. Parent

Continuous Cytosine-β-D-arabinofuranoside Infusion Reduces Ectopic Granule Cells in Adult Rat Hippocampus with Attenuation of Spontaneous Recurrent Seizures Following Pilocarpine-induced Status Epilepticus Jung KH, Chu K, Kim M, Jeong SW, Song YM, Lee ST, Kim JY, Lee SK, Roh JK Eur J Neurosci 2004;19(12):3219–3226 Brief or prolonged seizures induce various patterns of plasticity. Axonal or dendritic remodeling and development of ectopic granule cells have been described in the hilus and molecular layer of the adult rodent hippocampus. Hippocampal cell proliferation also occurs after seizures. However, whether the seizure-induced cell proliferation plays a pathologic or reparative role in the epileptic brain is unknown. In this study, we attempted to suppress the seizure-induced cell proliferation with the antimitotic agent cytosine- β-D-arabinofuranoside (Ara-C) and to examine the development of spontaneous recurrent seizures (SRSs). Experimental status epilepticus was induced with pilocarpine, and Ara-C or vehicle alone was infused continuously with an osmotic minipump. SRSs were video-monitored. Bromodeoxyuridine (BrdU) immunohistochemistry was used for the spatial and temporal analysis of hippocampal cell proliferation, and double labeling with NeuN, calbindin, and glial fibrillary acidic protein (GFAP) antibodies was performed for the differentiation of BrdU-positive cells. Timm staining also was performed for evaluation of mossy-fiber sprouting (MFS). With continuous Ara-C infusion, the likelihood of developing SRSs was decreased, and during the latent period, the development of ectopic granule cells in the hilus and new glia in the CA1 area was reduced when compared with that in the vehicle-infused group, whereas MFS was not altered. The results suggest that the hippocampal cell proliferation plays a proepileptogenic role rather than a compensatory role, and that the epileptogenic process may be associated with the generation of new glia in the CA1 area or new neurons in the dentate gyrus, particularly the ectopically located hilar granule cells, or both. Increased Neurogenesis and the Ectopic Granule Cells after Intrahippocampal BDNF Infusion in Adult Rats Scharfman H, Goodman J, Macleod A, Phani S, Antonelli C, Croll S Exp Neurol 2005;192(2):348–356 Evidence suggests that brain-derived neurotrophic factor (BDNF) influences the birth of granule cells in the dentate gyrus, which is one of the few areas of the brain that demonstrates neurogenesis throughout life. However, studies to date have not examined this issue directly. To do so, we compared the effects of BDNF, phosphate-buffered saline (PBS), or bovine serum albumin (BSA) on neurogenesis after infusion into the hippocampus of the normal adult rat, by using osmotic pumps that were implanted unilaterally in the dorsal hilus. BDNF, PBS, and BSA were infused for 2 weeks. The mitotic marker BrdU was administered twice daily during the 2-week infusion period. At least 1 month after infusion ended, brains were processed immunocytochemically by using antibodies to BrdU, a neuronal nuclear protein (NeuN), or calbindin D28K (CaBP), which labels mature granule cells. Stereology was used to quantify BrdU-labeled cells in the dorsal hippocampus that were double-labeled with NeuN or CaBP. A statistically significant increase in BrdU+/NeuN+ double-labeled cells was noted in the granule cell layer after BDNF infusion, relative to that in controls. The values for BrdU+/NeuN+ cells were similar to those for BrdU+/CaBP+ cells, indicating that most new neurons were likely to be granule cells. In addition, BrdU+/NeuN+-labeled cells developed in the hilar region after BDNF infusion; these have previously been identified only after severe continuous seizures (status epilepticus) and associated pathologic changes. Remarkably, neurogenesis also was increased contralaterally, but BDNF did not appear to spread to the opposite hemisphere. Thus, infusion of BDNF to a local area can have widespread effects on hippocampal neurogenesis. The results demonstrate that BDNF administration to the dentate gyrus leads to increased neurogenesis of granule cells. They also show that ectopic granule cells develop after BDNF infusion, which suggests that ectopic migration is not necessarily confined to pathologic conditions. These results are discussed in light of the evidence that BDNF increases neuronal activity in hippocampus. Thus, the mechanisms underlying neurogenesis after BDNF infusion could be due to altered activity as well as to direct effects of BDNF itself, and this is relevant to studies of other growth factors because many of them have effects on neuronal excitability that are often not considered.


Epilepsia ◽  
2006 ◽  
Vol 47 (10) ◽  
pp. 1665-1673 ◽  
Author(s):  
YogendraSinh H. Raol ◽  
Guojun Zhang ◽  
Ingrid V. Lund ◽  
Brenda E. Porter ◽  
Margaret A. Maronski ◽  
...  

Neuroscience ◽  
2007 ◽  
Vol 148 (3) ◽  
pp. 593-598 ◽  
Author(s):  
R. Muramatsu ◽  
Y. Ikegaya ◽  
N. Matsuki ◽  
R. Koyama

PLoS ONE ◽  
2012 ◽  
Vol 7 (7) ◽  
pp. e40726 ◽  
Author(s):  
Julián Tejada ◽  
Gabriel M. Arisi ◽  
Norberto García-Cairasco ◽  
Antonio C. Roque

2021 ◽  
Author(s):  
Douglas GoodSmith ◽  
Sang Hoon Kim ◽  
Vyash Puliyadi ◽  
Guo-li Ming ◽  
Hongjun Song ◽  
...  

The hippocampus is involved in the formation of memories that require associations among stimuli to construct representations of space and the items and events within that space. Neurons in the dentate gyrus (DG), an initial input region of the hippocampus, have robust spatial tuning, but it is unclear how nonspatial information may be integrated with spatially modulated firing at this stage. We recorded from the DG of 21 adult mice as they foraged for food in an environment that contained discrete objects. By classifying recorded DG cells into putative granule cells and mossy cells, we examined how the addition or displacement of objects affected the spatial firing of these DG cell types. We found DG cells with multiple firing fields at a fixed distance and direction from objects (landmark vector cells) as well as cells that exhibited localized changes in spatial firing when objects in the environment were manipulated. When mice were exposed to a second environment with the same objects, DG spatial maps were completely reorganized, suggesting standard global remapping, and a largely different subset of cells responded to object manipulations. Together, these data reveal the capacity of DG cells to detect small changes in the environment, while preserving a stable spatial representation of the overall context.


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