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The Journal of Neuroscience, April 1, 2003, 23(7):2759
Spontaneous Seizures and Loss of Axo-Axonic and Axo-Somatic
Inhibition Induced by Repeated Brief Seizures in Kindled Rats
Umit
Sayin1, *,
Susan
Osting2, *,
Joshua
Hagen1, *,
Paul
Rutecki1, 3, 4, and
Thomas
Sutula1, 2
Departments of 1 Neurology, 2 Anatomy, and
3 Neurological Surgery, University of Wisconsin, and
4 The William S. Middleton Veterans Administration
Hospital, Madison, Wisconsin 53792
Repeated brief seizures evoked by kindling progressively increase
seizure susceptibility and eventually induce spontaneous seizures.
Previous studies have demonstrated that the initial seizures evoked by
kindling increase paired-pulse inhibition at 15-25 msec interpulse
intervals in the dentate gyrus and also induce apoptosis, progressive
neuronal loss, mossy fiber sprouting, and neurogenesis, which could
potentially alter the balance of excitation and/or inhibition and
modify functional properties of hippocampal circuits. In these
experiments, paired-pulse inhibition in the dentate gyrus was reduced
or lost after ~90-100 evoked seizures in association with emergence
of spontaneous seizures. Evoked IPSCs examined by single electrode
voltage-clamp methods in granule cells from kindled rats experiencing
spontaneous seizures demonstrated altered kinetics (reductions of
~48% in 10-90% decay time, ~40% in , and ~65% in charge
transfer) and confirmed that decreased inhibition contributed to the
reduced paired-pulse inhibition. The loss of inhibition was accompanied
by loss of subclasses of inhibitory interneurons labeled by
cholecystokinin and the neuronal GABA transporter GAT-1, which project
axo-somatic and axo-axonic GABAergic inhibitory terminals to granule
cells and axon initial segments. Seizure-induced loss of interneurons
providing axo-somatic and axo-axonic inhibition may regulate spike
output to pyramidal neurons in CA3 and could play an important role in
generation of spontaneous seizures. The sequence of progressive
cellular alterations induced by repeated seizures, particularly loss of GABAergic interneurons providing axo-somatic and axo-axonic inhibition, may be important in the development of intractable epilepsy.
Key words:
hippocampus; dentate gyrus; GABA; CCK; GAT-1; damage; epilepsy
*
U.S., S.O., and J.H. contributed equally to this work.
Copyright © 2003 Society for Neuroscience 0270-6474/03/2372759-10$05.00/0
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