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The Journal of Neuroscience, June 1, 1998, 18(11):4363-4373
Magnesium Deficiency-Dependent Audiogenic Seizures (MDDASs) in
Adult Mice: A Nutritional Model for Discriminatory Screening of
Anticonvulsant Drugs and Original Assessment of Neuroprotection
Properties
Pierre
Bac1,
Pierre
Maurois2,
Charlotte
Dupont1,
Nicole
Pages3,
James P.
Stables4,
Pierre
Gressens5,
Philippe
Evrard5, and
Joseph
Vamecq6
1 Laboratoire de Pharmacologie, Faculté de
Pharmacie, F-92290 Châtenay-Malabry, France,
2 Institut National de la Santé et de la Recherche
Médicale U42, Domaine du Centre d'Etude et de Recherche
Technologique des Industries Alimentaires, F-59651 Villeneuve d'Ascq,
France, 3 Laboratoire de Toxicologie, Faculté de
Pharmacie, F-67401 Strasbourg, France, 4 Preclinical
Pharmacological Section, Epilepsy Branch, Division of Convulsive,
Developmental, and Neuromuscular Disorders, National Institute of
Neurological Diseases and Stroke, National Institutes of Health,
Bethesda, Maryland 20892-9020, 5 Laboratoire de Neurologie
du Développement and Service de Neurologie Pédiatrique,
Hôpital Robert-Debré, and Faculté de Médecine
Xavier-Bichat (Université de Paris VII), F-75019 Paris, France,
and 6 Institut National de la Santé et de la
Recherche Médicale Lab Ext-Centre Hospitalier Régional
Universitaire de Lille, Domaine du Centre d'Etude et de Recherche
Technologique des Industries Alimentaires, F-59651 Villeneuve d'Ascq
Cedex, France
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ABSTRACT |
A great many animal models for audiogenic seizures have been
described. The extent to which these models may provide insight into
neuroscience fields such as abnormal locomotor behavior (wild running),
seizures and anticonvulsants, and neuroinsults and neuroprotectors is
examined here by our study of magnesium deficiency-dependent audiogenic
seizures (MDDASs) in adult mice. MDDASs were induced in all of the
eight tested adult murine strains and are presented as a sequence of
four successive components (latency, wild running, convulsion, and
recovery phase periods). Compared with several classic seizure tests,
the nutritional MDDAS model responded to low doses of prototype
antiepileptic drugs (AEDs), including phenytoin (PHT), carbamazepine
(CBZ), phenobarbital (PB), valproic acid (VPA), ethosuximide (ESM), and
diazepam (DZP). Modulation by AEDs of the four components of MDDAS
indicated that this seizure test was discriminatory, distinguishing
between phenytoinergic (PHT, CBZ), GABAergic (PB, VPA, DZP), and
ethosuximide (ESM) compounds. Suitability of the MDDAS test for
evaluation of neuroprotective compounds was also examined: it showed
partial (melatonin) and complete (WEB2170, an anti-PAF agent) reduction
of recovery phase by non-anticonvulsant doses of test compounds. These
neuroprotective responses were compared with neuroprotective potentials
determined in a model of neonatal cerebral injury induced by focal
injection of ibotenate (a glutamate analog). WEB2170 and melatonin
reduced the size of lesions in white matter, but only WEB2170 protected cortical plate against ibotenate-induced lesions. In addition to the
original neuroprotective behavior of WEB2170, studies on the
neuroprotectors also supported GABAergic anticonvulsant activity of
melatonin in the MDDAS test.
Key words:
antiepileptic drugs; phenytoin; carbamazepine; phenobarbital; ethosuximide; valproic acid; diazepam; nutrition; magnesium deficiency; anticonvulsants; audiogenic seizures; electroshock; MES; pentylenetetrazol; bicuculline; neuroprotectors; picrotoxin; thieno-triazolodiazepine; benzodiazepine; hetrazepine; melatonin; ibotenate; PAF; anti-PAF; WEB2170; GABA; NMDA receptor; discriminatory screening; seizure test
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INTRODUCTION |
Seizures triggered by an
acoustic stimulus (i.e., audiogenic seizures) have been described in
laboratory animals in a great many circumstances, including genetic
models (Chapman et al., 1984 ; Neumann and Collins, 1992 ) and acquired
susceptibility. Audiogenic susceptibility may be secondary to auditive
alterations caused by noise (Pierson and Liebmann, 1992 ), acoustic
deprivation (Pierson and Swann, 1991 ), and kanamycin (Pierson and
Swann, 1988 ). This susceptibility may also result from focal infusion
in the inferior colliculus of bicuculline (Millan et al., 1986 ; Bagri et al., 1989 ; Terra and Garcia-Cairasco, 1992 ; Tsutsui et al., 1992 )
and cyclic AMP analogs (Ludvig and Moshe, 1987 ), or from exposure to
H13/04 catecholamide (a tryptophan hydroxylase inhibitor) (Stine and
Kellogg, 1982 ), metaphit (a phencyclidine analog) (Debler et al., 1993 ;
Lipovac et al., 1993 ), and -difluoromethylornithine (Gerrish et al.,
1993 ). Withdrawals in alcohol (Faingold and Riaz, 1994 , 1995 ; Riaz and
Faingold, 1994 ) and progesterone (Hom et al., 1993 ; Voiculescu et al.,
1994 ) have been well documented to favor audiogenic seizures. Other
animal models for acquired audiogenic susceptibility include
electrolytic lesions of substantia nigra (Doretto and
Garcia-Cairasco, 1995 ), ischemia (Kawai et al., 1995 ; Schurr et al.,
1995 ), and dietary manipulations such as magnesium deprivation (Bac et
al., 1993a ,b ).
Cerebral imbalance of the major regulatory antagonistic systems, i.e.,
decreased GABAergic activity associated with increased excitatory
aminoacidergic pathways, has been found to play a key role in
initiating audiogenic seizures (Engstrom and Woodbury, 1988 ; Faingold
et al., 1992 , 1994 ; Wieraszko and Seyfried, 1993 ; Cordero et al., 1994 ;
Terra and Garcia-Cairasco, 1994 ). Mechanisms for audiogenic
susceptibility also include reduction of Ca2+ ATPase
activity (Palayoor and Seyfried, 1984 ; Palayoor et al., 1986 ; Seyfried
et al., 1986 ), cyclic AMP responsiveness (Ludvig et al., 1985 ), and
histaminergic and adrenergic neuronal efficiencies (Jobe et al., 1986 ;
Tuomisto et al., 1987 ), as well as enhancement of glutamate
decarboxylase mRNA expression (Ribak et al., 1993 ), and, as an adaptive
mechanism for defective anion transport, of carbonic anhydrase activity
(Woodbury et al., 1984 ; Engstrom et al., 1986 ; Faingold et al., 1986 ;
Yu et al., 1986 ). Abnormal serotonin physiology such as impaired
metabolism (Peters and Lack, 1985 ), receptor distribution (increased
density of cortical 5HT2 binding sites) (Jazrawi and
Horton, 1989 ), and binding (Statnick et al., 1996 ) have also been
described.
Circumstances or mechanisms responsible for audiogenic seizures have
been the topic of many investigations, and the search for novel
conditions or mechanisms is not specifically the subject of this paper.
In fact, a previously described condition for audiogenic seizure, i.e.,
magnesium deficiency-dependent audiogenic seizures (MDDASs) in adult
mice, is considered here from the strict point of view of a system for
which we document general characteristics and multiple facets. In this
respect, it is shown that the MDDAS model represents a seizure test
responsive to low doses of antiepileptic drugs (AEDs), displays
discriminatory properties toward anticonvulsant activities of AEDs, and
provides an original assessment of neuroprotective properties of test
compounds. In addition to these interesting multiple facets of the
MDDAS model, the present work further supports the GABAergic
anticonvulsant activity of melatonin (a neurohormonal indol compound)
and originally reports neuroprotective properties of WEB2170 (an
anti-PAF agent). Discriminatory effects of AEDs on the abnormal
locomotor behavior component of MDDASs, namely wild running, are also
pointed out.
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MATERIALS AND METHODS |
Animals. For the MDDAS tests, eight murine strains,
including AKR, BALB/C, B6D2F1, CBA, C57BL/6, C3 Hr/He, DBA/2, and OF1 strains [4-month-old (adult) mice], were purchased from IFFA Credo (Arbresle, France). For each strain, adult mice were randomly divided
into groups of 20 mice per cage. Mice were given either magnesium-deficient or standard control magnesium-containing food, i.e., 50 ± 5 mg/kg of Mg or 930 ± 30 mg/kg of Mg synthetic
diets, respectively. Diet content in magnesium was monitored by a
previously established procedure (Maurois et al., 1989 ). Body weight
gain was similar in control and magnesium-deficient mice. For classic animal seizure tests, albino mice (CF-1 strain, 18-25 gm; Charles River, Wilmington, MA) given a standard animal chow (S/L Custom Lab
Diet-7) were used as experimental animals.
Seizure tests. For the MDDAS tests, individual animals were
placed in a 9-dm3-volume test chamber (30, 20, and
15 cm for length, width, and height, respectively) and exposed for 15 sec to an auditory signal of 10 ± 0.1 kHz frequency and 100 ± 1 dB intensity. This acoustic stimulus signal was produced by a
signal generator and projected via a high-frequency speaker mounted on
the roof of the chamber. The noise level was measured close to the
animal's ear by an external decibel-meter probe. Each audiogenic
seizure test used only one test chamber. Each animal was subjected to
only one audiogenic seizure test during the experimentation. Audiogenic
seizure tests were videotaped.
The classic animal seizure tests were conducted according to the
anticonvulsant drug development (ADD) program protocol (Krall et al.,
1978 ; Porter et al., 1984 ; Kupferberg, 1989 ), including the maximal
electroshock seizure (MES) pattern test and three chemical tests:
subcutaneous pentylenetetrazol seizure threshold test (sc. Ptz),
subcutaneous bicuculline seizure threshold test (sc. Bic), and
subcutaneous picrotoxin seizure threshold test (sc. Pic) (White et al.,
1995b ). The chemical tests measured the capacity of a test compound to
provide complete protection against threshold seizures induced by the
subcutaneous injection of the CD97 (dose estimated to
elicit convulsions in 97% of animals) of each chemical convulsant. The
subcutaneous CD97 values of pentylenetetrazol, bicuculline,
and picrotoxin in mice were 85, 2.7, and 3.15 mg/kg, respectively
(White et al., 1995b ).
Antiepileptic drugs. Phenobarbital (PB), ethosuximide (ESM),
valproate (VPA), phenytoin (PHT), and diazepam (DZP) were prepared in
0.9% sodium chloride solution. Carbamazepine (CBZ) was administered in
a 15% polyethylene glycol (PEG) 400/water mixture (MDDAS test) or in a
0.5% methylcellulose mixture (classic seizure tests). The drugs were
administered intraperitoneally in a volume of 0.01 ml/gm body weight to
mice at the previously defined time-to-peak drug effect. To determine
anticonvulsant potency and neurotoxicity, groups of 10 (MDDAS test) or
8 (classic seizure tests) mice were tested with various doses of the
compounds between the limits of 100 and 0% protection or toxicity.
Doses of drug required to produce complete prevention of seizures in
50% of mice (ED50) or minimal neurotoxicity in 50%
of animals (TD50), and respective 95% confidence
intervals, were calculated on a computer program by probit analysis.
The protection index (PI) was calculated as the ratio between
TD50 and ED50 values.
Minimal neurotoxicity determinations. The median minimal
neurotoxic dose (TD50) in mice was determined by the
rotorod procedure. The test animal is placed on a 1-inch-diameter
knurled plastic rod rotating at 6 rpm. Normal mice can remain on a rod
rotating at this speed without any difficulty. Animals are evaluated
for neurological deficit (e.g., ataxia, sedation, hyperexcitability) by
observing their balance on the device for at least 1 min (CF1 mice) or
2 min (magnesium-deficient mice) in each of three trials.
Ibotenate-induced cerebral injury. The ibotenate-induced
cerebral injury model has been described previously (Marret et al., 1995 ; Gressens et al., 1997 ). Essentially, at postnatal day 5, Swiss
mice pups were anesthetized with ether and kept under a warming lamp. A
26 gauge needle mounted on a 50 µl Hamilton syringe equipped with a
calibrated microdispenser was placed intracerebrally according to
precise stereotaxic coordinates. Two boluses of 1 µl (10 µg
ibotenate/1 µl PBS) were injected at a 30 sec interval, one in the
white matter and the other in the cortical plate. The test
neuroprotector compounds (i.e., WEB2170 from Boehringer Ingelheim, Ingelheim am Rein, Germany, and melatonin from Sigma, St. Louis, MO)
were given by intraperitoneal route within the 3 min after intracerebral ibotenate injection. At postnatal day 10, formol was
infused intracardially in killed animals. Brains were removed and
post-fixed before histological evaluation on serial coronal sections of
ibotenate-induced cerebral lesions was performed.
Statistical analyses. Statistical analyses for classic
anticonvulsant tests (Porter et al., 1984 ) and for ibotenate-induced lesion measurements (Gressens et al., 1997 ) were performed as previously described. In the MDDAS tests, normal distribution was
assessed according to the Shapiro Wilk's test. Statistical significance was calculated by ANOVA. The difference between the groups
was calculated using the Kruskal-Wallis test.
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RESULTS |
MDDAS: a nutritionally induced seizure model with
various components
Adult mice from AKR, BALB/C, B6D2F1, CBA, C57BL/6, C3 Hr/He,
DBA/2, and OF1 strains were given either a magnesium-deficient diet or
a standard control magnesium-containing diet. For the duration of the
treatment period, none of the adult mice (all strains considered) given
the standard control diet developed audiogenic seizures. This
contrasted with animals receiving magnesium-deficient diets and
attested to the magnesium-deficiency dependence of the audiogenic
seizure model. Determinations of time periods of magnesium-deficient diet administration that induced susceptibility to audiogenic seizures
in 50 and 100% of treated animals are documented in Figure 1. DBA/2 mice needed the shortest period
(20 d) for induction of the audiogenic seizure susceptibility in all
animals, whereas both C57BL/6 and BALB/C mice comparatively required
approximately twice the administration period (42 d) of
magnesium-deprivation to become completely sensitive (100%) to the
audiogenic seizure (Fig. 1). Intermediary periods of magnesium
deprivation were necessary for OF1 mice; 22 and 36 d of
treatment induced audiogenic seizure susceptibility in 50 and 100%
of animals.

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Figure 1.
The MDDAS model: time periods of magnesium
deprivation required to induce susceptibility to audiogenic seizures in
various strains of mice. Normal time periods of magnesium-deficient
diet administration leading to audiogenic seizure susceptibility in 50 and 100% of tested animals are given.
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The timing of events characterizing the audiogenic seizure episode was
studied in detail in magnesium-deficient adult mice. The general course
corresponded exactly to that described in the literature by Seyfried et
al. (1986) for the genetic models of audiogenic seizures and consisted
of a progressive sequence of phases. There was a short latency
period from the initiation of sound stimulation to the onset of an
explosive burst of wild, frenzied running. The wild running phase
progressed into a clonic sequence, starting with the fall of the mouse
on its side, characterized by violent kicking movements, followed by a
tonic sequence during which forelegs and subsequently hindlegs become
rigidly extended to the rear. After this clonic-tonic phase, a
recovery phase takes place before the animal recovers its normal
locomotor activity. The chronology of these events is given in Figure
2, with a detailed videotaped
illustration of a time frame that includes the end of the wild running,
the convulsive phase, and the early recovery phase. Four components of
the overall seizure episode induced by sound stimulation were
individualized: the latency period, the wild running phase, the
convulsive phase, and the recovery phase. Standard values for each of
these four components in audiogenic seizures performed in
magnesium-deficient adult DBA/2 and OF1 mice are given in Figure
3. Moreover, this provides a comparison of values recorded in these two nutritional models with those obtained
in the genetic audiogenic seizure model represented by the young (3- to
4-weeks-old) nonmagnesium-deprived DBA/2 mice. Little or no differences
were found between the three groups of mice.

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Figure 2.
The MDDAS model: chronology of the overall
audiogenic seizure episode in magnesium-deficient adult mice. Durations
of acoustic stimulus (10 kHz frequency and 100 dB intensity) and the
four components of the animal response (LP, latency
period; WR, wild running; C, convulsive
phase; R, recovery phase) are given at the
bottom of the figure and provide an overview of the
chronology of the audiogenic seizure in a magnesium-deficient DBA/2
adult mouse (similar data were recorded with magnesium-deficient mice
from other strains such as the OF1 strain). The top of
the figure shows pictures taken from a videotaped experiment and a time
segment including the end of the wild running phase
(1-11, with a time span between each of these pictures
equal to 0.2 sec), the convulsive phase (12-21, with
time spans of ~0.5 sec between pictures), and the early recovery
phase (22). Arrows have been added to
help the understanding of presented documents. Arrows
outside the animal cages refer to the chronological order of events;
arrows inside the cages refer to the movements expressed
by the mouse during the wild running. A standard laboratory animal cage
of 9 dm3 was used. Observe that this cage volume
does not restrict the locomotor activity of the mouse during wild
running. Note also the remarkable excess of physical energy expressed
by the animal during wild running. Other comments are in Results.
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Figure 3.
The MDDAS model: time period values for the four
components of the audiogenic seizure episode comparison with the
21-d-old DBA/2 mice genetic model. The components of the audiogenic
seizure episode have been determined in the nutritional MDDAS models
(magnesium-deficient adult OF1 and DBA/2 mice) and the genetic model
provided by the normally magnesium-fed 21-d-old DBA/2 mice.
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MDDAS: a seizure test responsive to low doses of AEDs and endowed
with discriminatory properties
Responses of MDDAS to prototype AEDs were studied according to two
distinct lines of experimentation. In the first approach (referred to
as the MDDAS prevention model), the ability of AEDs to prevent
audiogenic seizures in magnesium-deficient animals was studied
(protected nonconvulsing animals were considered). In the second
approach (referred to as the MDDAS modulation model), effects of AEDs
on each of the four components of MDDAS were investigated (convulsing
animals were studied).
The MDDAS prevention model (prevention by AEDs of seizures in the
MDDAS model)
Various prototype AEDs including PHT, CBZ, PB, VPA, ESM, and DZP
were tested for their ability to protect magnesium-deficient mice
against audiogenic seizures. Their neurotoxicity in the rotorod test
was also measured in the magnesium-deficient animals. Percentages of
either anticonvulsant protection (percentage of animals with prevention
of audiogenic seizures) or neurotoxicity induced by prototype AEDs as a
function of the intraperitoneal dose of drug administered to
magnesium-deficient adult DBA/2 and OF1 mice were determined. From
these determinations, ED50, TD50, and PI values of AEDs were calculated in the MDDAS model to allow comparison with
pharmacological characteristics of the tested drugs in four classic
animal seizure tests, including MES, scPTZ, scBic, and scPic tests
(Table 1).
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Table 1.
Anticonvulsant activities and neurotoxicities of prototype
AEDs in MDDAS and classic animal seizure tests
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In the MDDAS test, prevention of seizures induced by AEDs in adult OF1
and DBA/2 mice were essentially similar (Table 1). DZP was by far the
most active AED, presenting with an ED50 value of
0.09-0.12 mg/kg and a PI of 22-27. PB was also relatively potent in
this test, giving an ED50 of 12-13 mg/kg and a PI of
6.0-6.1. PHT and CBZ gave similar ED50 values (23-25
mg/kg) and comparable PI (3.0-3.2 and 3.6-3.8, respectively). VPA and
ESM were less active, behaving roughly similarly in their
anticonvulsant protection offered in the MDDAS test, with
ED50 values of 70-73 and 73-78 mg/kg, respectively.
The MDDAS model essentially distinguished from classic animal models
the low levels of AEDs required to produce anticonvulsant, whereas it
maintained good protection indices.
The MDDAS modulation model (modulation by AEDs of the various
components of the MDDAS model)
The effect of AEDs at a dose close to the
ED50, exactly between ED40 and
ED45 on the various components of the seizure episode was
studied in the MDDAS model (Table 2).
Grosso modo, the effects of AEDs on the time periods of
these components (latency for wild running, wild running, convulsion,
and recovery phases) occurred according to different profiles, i.e.,
those expressed by (1) ESM, (2) DZP, PB, and VPA, and (3) CBZ and PHT,
respectively. In fact, with the exception of ESM, all of AEDs tested
induced modifications in the various components of the observed
seizures (Table 2). The convulsions observed in animals on ESM were
indistinguishable from those in animals having received no drugs,
despite the fact that the actual number of convulsing animals was
reduced by ESM (at a dose preventing seizures in 40-45% of animals).
For the other AEDs, the four components of the seizure episode were
altered as follows (Table 2 shows statistical significance of
variations vs controls). Latency periods for wild running were
increased by 1.5-fold for PB, VPA, and DZP, and fivefold for CBZ and
PHT. Duration of wild running was increased by PB, VPA, and DZP (133, 137 and 155% of control values, respectively) and, by contrast, was
reduced by CBZ and PHT (74 and 62% of control values, respectively) (Table 2). Duration of convulsions was reduced by 28, 35, and 41% for
VPA, PB, and DZP, respectively, and by 61 and 67% for PHT and CBZ,
respectively. Duration of the recovery phases was also decreased either
by 50% for PB, VPA, and DZP or by 90% for CBZ and PHT (Table 2).
MDDAS: a neuroinsult model for the study of neuroprotective
properties of compounds
The suitability of the MDDAS test for evaluation of
neuroprotective properties resulted from a serendipitous observation
made during the screening of drugs for evaluation of anticonvulsant properties. One compound, i.e., WEB2170, presented with a relatively striking behavior in the MDDAS model. Although at the doses tested (5, 10, and 15 mg/kg) this compound was devoid of anticonvulsant activity
(neither significant change in the number of convulsing animals nor
significant modulatory effect on the latency, wild running, and
convulsion time periods was evident), it completely abolished the
recovery phase period; all of the test animals actually recovered
normal locomotor activity as soon as their convulsions were terminated.
As described above, a mean recovery phase of ~53 sec is normally
taking place between the end of seizures and recovery of normal
locomotor activity (Figs. 2, 3; Table 2).
WEB2170 is a thieno-triazolodiazepine previously developed by the
pharmaceutical industry for anti-PAF properties (Weber and Heuer,
1989 ). Neuroprotective properties of WEB2170 were not previously reported. Consequently, it was imperative to confirm that the effect
observed on WEB2170 in the MDDAS model was compatible with neuroprotection. First, melatonin, a known neuroprotector agent with
free radical-scavenging properties, was investigated in the MDDAS
model. Second, neuroprotective properties of WEB2170, along with
melatonin, were evaluated further in a standardized test using
ibotenate focal injection as the cerebral injury.
Evaluation of melatonin in the MDDAS model showed that the
neurohormonal indol compound was capable of reducing the recovery phase
time period (<25% reduction at 10 mg/kg). Another phenomenon was that
increasing the dose of melatonin resulted in the appearance of an
anticonvulsant activity, with an ED50 approximated to be 60 mg/kg (TD50 >300 mg/kg). In convulsing animals submitted
to that dose, melatonin influenced the various MDDAS components
according to the GABAergic (Table 2) profile, with a ~1.5-fold
increase in both latency and wild running time periods and a 1.5-fold
decrease in the convulsion time period. The recovery time period was
relatively short, with reduction of this component being the combined
results from anticonvulsant and neuroprotective properties of
melatonin.
Evaluations of neuroprotective properties of five doses (0.002, 0.02, 0.2, 2, and 20 µg) of WEB2170 and melatonin in the ibotenate-induced cerebral injury model are given in Figure
4. The sizes of ibotenate-induced lesions
were reduced by WEB2170 in both cortical plate (gray matter) and white
matter; these two neuroprotective effects occurred for doses higher
than 2 and 0.2 µg, respectively. Melatonin was efficient in reducing
ibotenate-induced lesions in white matter at doses similar to the
efficacious doses of WEB2170. By contrast with the latter compound, at
doses tested melatonin was devoid of neuroprotective effect on lesions
induced in cortical plate.

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Figure 4.
Evaluation of the neuroprotective potentials of
WEB2170 and melatonin in a model of cerebral injury induced by focal
injection of ibotenate. Cerebral focal injections of ibotenate were
performed in mice at postnatal day 5 in the absence
(CONTROLS) or the presence of concomitant
neuroprotective treatment (either WEB2170 or
MELATONIN given by intraperitoneal route). Five doses of
neuroprotectors were screened to allow determination of neuroprotection
potency offered by test compounds. Reduction of the size of lesions was
neuroprotection. Each result is mean value of six separate experimental
determinations (±SEM) and is illustrated by histogram representation.
Other comments are in Results.
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MDDASs: neuroprotective potential of AEDs
AEDs were evaluated in the MDDAS modulation test at the
anticonvulsant ED0 (i.e., highest dose tested that was
unable to reduce the number of convulsing animals) to determine whether
AEDs were endowed with neuroprotective properties in this test. At this dose, GABAergic compounds (PB, VPA, DZP) and ESM had no effect on MDDAS
components. Phenytoinergic AEDs (PHT, CBZ) doubled the latency and
reduced by 15-20% the wild running period. PHT but not CBZ reduced
the convulsion phase time period by 20%. Recovery phase period was
reduced by only 8% by PHT, but relatively unexpectedly by >30% by
CBZ, an observation that might suggest some neuroprotective potential
for the latter compound in the MDDAS test.
MDDASs: miscellaneous
Table 3 provides an overview for
major MDDAS data generated by the present experimentation and includes
discriminatory properties of the seizure test and suitability for
neuroprotector activity evaluation. Table 3 also documents the results
obtained with AEDs tested in the MDDAS test at the ED0 and
ED100 anticonvulsant doses. At the ED100
anticonvulsant dose (i.e., lowest dose tested that reduced by 100% the
number of convulsing animals), all four MDDAS components were prevented
by phenytoinergic (PHT, CBZ) and ethosuximide AEDs. By contrast,
GABAergic compounds (PB, VPA, DZP) were unable to abolish completely
the wild running behavior, despite the fact that neither convulsions
nor recovery phase were recorded in tested animals. At the
ED100 dose, the wild running period was actually increased
by GABAergic compounds, and higher doses were required for the
abolishment of the wild running component of MDDASs.
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DISCUSSION |
MDDASs: biological significance of data
MDDASs represent a nutritional model of neurological disturbances,
including abnormal locomotor behavior (wild running), seizures, and
cerebral injury. Moreover, MDDASs can be considered a relatively universal model in view of successful induction by magnesium deficiency of audiogenic susceptibility in all adult murine strains tested. Studies using folic acid as a normally excluded systemic agent (data
not shown) suggest further that, functionally, the blood-brain barrier
(BBB) in magnesium deficiency would be relatively intact. This view is
corroborated by the absence of increased neurotoxicity induced in
magnesium-deficient animals by AEDs (compare TD50 values, Table 2). These preliminary data, however, could not absolutely rule
out limited anatomical lesions of BBB or development of BBB disruption
with repetition of seizures. In the present work, no repetition of
seizures was performed in the same animal: each animal underwent only
one MDDAS test during the whole experimentation.
The responses to low AED doses of MDDAS prevention testing suggest that
the procedure is potentially suitable for initial anticonvulsant
screening with yes-no type information on the test compounds, but the
most important interest in the MDDAS prevention model might rely on the
fact that daily doses of AEDs recommended for chronic therapy in human
epilepsy are directly proportional, and for each AED they are
approximately threefold less than the ED50 determined for
acute control of seizures in the nutritional animal model. Therefore,
values obtained in this test might well predict therapeutic efficacy in
humans.
Discriminatory properties of the MDDAS modulation model toward
phenytoinergic (PHT, CBZ), GABAergic (PB, VPA, DZP), and ethosuximide (ESM) AEDs are well supported by the present experimental data. The
MDDAS initiation component, i.e., wild running, is generated from the
inferior colliculus (IC). IC neurons exhibit extensive firing increases
before and during wild running, and silence during the convulsion and
recovery phases (Faingold and Randall, 1995 ). Wild running responds
well to AEDs, which inhibit the spread of seizures such as neuronal
voltage-dependent sodium channel blockers (phenytoinergic compounds)
(Table 2), and consistent with the impairment of GABA inhibition
reported in audiogenic seizure models (Faingold et al., 1994 ), it is
not reduced by GABAergic compounds. By contrast, the convulsive phase
responds well to GABAergic activity. This might suggest that in the
MDDAS model, convulsion and wild running would require distinct
cerebral sites or cellular pathways or both. Physiological connections,
however, would not be excluded, as suggested by the observation that
wild running inhibition through severe locomotor activity reduction
succeeded in preventing audiogenic seizures (data not shown). As
concluded previously by others (Wada et al., 1995 ), excessive physical
activity might be a step favoring the development of certain forms of
seizures.
The suitability of MDDASs for studying neuroprotection is an additional
interesting facet. Many neuroinsult models have been developed, among
which are manipulations leading to reduced brain oxygenation and
perfusion, and local cerebral traumatism or chemicals infusion. In the
MDDAS test performed in the absence of specific neuroprotectors, the
recovery phase was always taking place after the animals had convulsed,
and no recovery phase was observed when animals did not convulse, even
if these animals presented with wild running (this particular profile
is observed with GABAergic AEDs at the anticonvulsant ED100
and adjacent higher doses) (Table 3). Use of the convulsive episode as
a cerebral insult is of direct relevant interest in human clinics,
especially for cerebral injuries generated by severe convulsive
episodes (e.g., status epilepticus), which despite adequate
control by therapy and apparently normal brain function may progress
secondarily within 24-48 hr into important cerebral damages. This
explains in such circumstances the importance of the prognosis made 48 hr after control of the initial cerebral insult.
Exact underlying mechanisms leading to the recovery phase after ictus
are not fully understood. Because these mechanisms may be partially
(melatonin) or completely (WEB2170) neutralized by neuroprotector
compounds, common cerebral injury events such as increased oxidative
stress caused by excessive free radical generation may be reasonably
hypothesized along with transient edema, a possible resultant of
seizure episodes. The intrinsic mode of action of the two
neuroprotective compounds shown here to be efficacious in this model
should also be taken into account.
Melatonin-induced neuroprotection evidenced by partial neutralization
of the recovery phase after ictus of MDDASs and reduction of ibotenate
cerebral toxicity might be accounted for by the well known free radical
scavenging properties of this compound (Poegeller et al., 1994 ),
although other mechanisms could be involved (Acuna-Castroviejo et al.,
1995 ). Either proconvulsant (Sandik et al., 1992 ) or anticonvulsant (Champney and Champney, 1992 ) activities of melatonin have been reported previously. Present data obviously argue in favor of anticonvulsant potential expressed by melatonin. Very importantly, our
work provides valuable circumstantial evidence for confirming the
recent view supported by neurochemical and behavioral data that
melatonin interacts with the GABAergic system (Acuna-Castroviejo et
al., 1995 ; Golombek et al., 1996 ). Neurological pathological states
other than epilepsy may be associated with abnormal GABA physiology
(e.g., some forms of depression are characterized by reduced body fluid
levels of GABA) (Petty, 1995 ), and the present results should encourage
the use of melatoninergic compounds as potentially efficacious drugs in
these disorders.
Neuroprotective properties of WEB2170 were discovered through
evaluation in the MDDAS test. This effect was spectacular and led to a
complete suppression of the recovery phase. Evaluation in the well
standardized ibotenate injury model confirms the potency and interest
in this compound by providing evidence of protection not only for white
matter but also, by contrast with melatonin, for cortical plate matter.
The major generally known mode of action of WEB2170 is anti-PAF
activity (Weber and Heuer, 1989 ). It may be stressed that PAF is an
ether phospholipid for which receptors have now been identified in
brain on synaptic endings and intracellular membranes (Marcheselli et
al., 1990 ). Very importantly, cerebral PAF concentrations increase
during trauma, leading to increased intracellular
Ca2+ concentrations (Kumar et al., 1988 ; Kornecki
and Ehrlich, 1991 ). In fact, PAF can stimulate excitatory amino acid
neurotransmission and has no effect on GABA-mediated inhibition (Clark
et al., 1992 ). Moreover, PAF antagonism has neuroprotective potential
(Kornecki and Ehrlich, 1988 ). Neuroprotection by PAF antagonists
includes enhanced availability of short ACTH fragments (Maclennan et
al., 1995 ), reduction of PAF-induced increases in intracellular
Ca2+ concentrations, and reduced function of
excitatory amino acid receptors (Lindsberg et al., 1991 ). The last
mechanisms are consistent with the excellent response to WEB2170 of
ibotenate-induced lesions and the MDDAS recovery phase component.
Ibotenate is a glutamate analog (originating from the muscarina
amanita mushroom) that produces cerebral damages through potent
activation of NMDA and metabotropic receptors (Marret et al., 1995 ).
NMDA receptor activation of lesser importance is suggested for the
MDDAS model as a result of systemic magnesium deficiency and plausible
reduction in magnesium bioavailability for the receptor. Removal (or
reduction) of magnesium located in a voltage-dependent site of the
ionic channel of NMDA receptor is known to act as a second key; the
first key is the agonist (glutamate) of the receptor at the same time
that several receptor subsites, such as the glycine site, also
contribute to activation of the NMDA receptor (Monoghan et al.,
1989 ).
Study of the neuroprotective potential of AEDs indicates that the MDDAS
neuroprotectant evaluation test would be specific for neuroprotectors
and distinct from MDDAS anticonvulsant evaluation. CBZ excepted, none
of the test AEDs (PHT, PB, VPA, DZP, ESM) gave neuroprotective
responses at the anticonvulsant ED0. Regarding CBZ, it is
noteworthy that this compound was found to be more efficient as a
neuroprotectant than in blocking Na+ currents in the
veratridine-induced cell death model (Lakics et al., 1995 ). In the last
experimentation and in the present MDDAS model, the intrinsic
neuroprotective potential of CBZ may be concluded to be relatively
better than that of PHT.
The mechanisms and experimental conditions leading to susceptibility to
audiogenic seizures were reviewed in the introductory remarks. For
several of these audiogenic seizures, control by AEDs has been
documented previously. During the present experimentation, the multiple
facets of the MDDAS model and their biological significance have been
extensively developed. The results are encouraging, and subsequent
neuroscience research should determine the extent to which the
above-cited audiogenic seizure models might compare favorably with the
MDDAS test in terms of discriminatory screening of AEDs and suitability
for the study of neuroprotective compounds.
 |
FOOTNOTES |
Received Feb. 13, 1998; accepted March 17, 1998.
This work was supported by the Comité Directeur de la Recherche
(University Hospital of Lille and Faculty of Medicine from University
of Lille II). P.M. and J.V. are sponsored by the French Institut
National de la Santé et de la Recherche Médicale.
Experimental data on classic animal seizure models were obtained from
the laboratories of Drs. H. Wolfe and S. White (University of Utah),
contracted by National Institutes of Health.
Correspondence should be addressed to Dr. J. Vamecq, Institut National
de la Santé et de la Recherche Médicale, Domaine du Centre
d'Etude et de Recherche Technologique des Industries Alimentaires,
369, Rue Jules Guesde, BP 39, F-59651 Villeneuve d'Ascq Cedex,
France.
 |
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