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The Journal of Neuroscience, June 1, 2002, 22(11):4591-4599
Developmental Febrile Seizures Modulate Hippocampal Gene
Expression of Hyperpolarization-Activated Channels in an Isoform-
and Cell-Specific Manner
Amy
Brewster1, *,
Roland
A.
Bender1, 2, *,
Yuncai
Chen2,
Celine
Dube1,
Mariam
Eghbal-Ahmadi2, and
Tallie Z.
Baram1, 2, 3
Departments of 1 Anatomy/Neurobiology,
2 Pediatrics, and 3 Neurology, University of
California at Irvine, Irvine, California 92697-4475
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ABSTRACT |
Febrile seizures, in addition to being the most common seizure type
of the developing human, may contribute to the generation of subsequent
limbic epilepsy. Our previous work has demonstrated that prolonged
experimental febrile seizures in the immature rat model increased
hippocampal excitability long term, enhancing susceptibility to future
seizures. The mechanisms for these profound proepileptogenic changes
did not require cell death and were associated with long-term slowed
kinetics of the hyperpolarization-activated depolarizing current
(IH). Here we show that these
seizures modulate the expression of genes encoding this current, the
hyperpolarization-activated, cyclic nucleotide-gated channels (HCNs):
In CA1 neurons expressing multiple HCN isoforms, the seizures induced a
coordinated reduction of HCN1 mRNA and enhancement of HCN2 expression,
thus altering the neuronal HCN phenotype. The seizure-induced
augmentation of HCN2 expression involved CA3 in addition to CA1,
whereas for HCN4, mRNA expression was not changed by the seizures in
either hippocampal region. This isoform- and region-specific
transcriptional regulation of the HCNs required neuronal activity
rather than hyperthermia alone, correlated with seizure duration, and
favored the formation of slow-kinetics HCN2-encoded channels. In
summary, these data demonstrate a novel, activity-dependent
transcriptional regulation of HCN molecules by developmental seizures.
These changes result in long-lasting alteration of the HCN phenotype of
specific hippocampal neuronal populations, with profound consequences
on the excitability of the hippocampal network.
Key words:
hippocampus; development; febrile seizures; epilepsy; channels; hyperpolarization; HCN; neuroplasticity
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INTRODUCTION |
Seizures induced by fever (febrile
seizures) occur in 1 of 7 to 1 of 30 infants and children worldwide,
thus constituting the most common seizure type of the developing brain
(Hauser, 1994 ). However, the mechanisms for the generation of these
intense bouts of synchronized abnormal neuronal activity remain
unclear, and importantly, the consequences of these seizures are
incompletely understood. Conflicting human studies have implicated
prolonged (>15 min) febrile seizures as potential key determinants of
the generation of spontaneous hippocampal/limbic seizures (temporal lobe epilepsy) later in life (Shinnar, 1998 ; Cendes and
Andermann, 2002 ). However, the direct causal relationship of prolonged
febrile seizures to this common epilepsy, and the mechanisms by which these early life seizures might be proepileptogenic, have not been resolved.
Using an appropriate aged model of prolonged febrile seizures, we have
previously demonstrated profound and long-term enhancement of
hippocampal excitability, with increased susceptibility to future
seizures (Dubé et al., 2000 ). The mechanisms for
these proepileptogenic changes did not require cell death (Toth et al., 1998 ; Bender and Baram, 2002 ) and were associated with potentiated perisomatic inhibition of hippocampal pyramidal cells and altered properties of the hyperpolarization-activated depolarizing
current (IH) (Chen et al., 1999 ; K. Chen et al., 2001 ). This current, encoded by a family of genes
[hyperpolarization-activated, cyclic nucleotide-gated channels
(HCNs), see below], undergoes short-term regulation by cAMP
(DiFrancesco and Tortora, 1991 ; Waigner et al., 2001 ). However, the
febrile seizure-induced changes were both cAMP independent and long
lasting (weeks to months) (K. Chen et al., 2001 ). Therefore, we
conducted a series of experiments to test the hypothesis that these
seizures lead to transcriptional regulation of HCN subunit isoforms,
thus modifying the HCN phenotype of individual neurons long term.
HCNs mediate the hyperpolarization-activated
(IH) currents in the heart
(DiFrancesco, 1993 ) and brain (Pape, 1996 ). These channels participate
in regulating neuronal membrane potential (Lupica et al., 2001 ) and
contribute critically to pacemaker activity, promoting synchronization
of neuronal networks such as those in the thalamus and hippocampus
(Pape, 1996 ; Santoro and Tibbs, 1999 ). As mentioned above, short-term
modulation of HCN gating involves the binding of cAMP to the C terminal
intracellular domain of the channel (Waigner et al., 2001 ). This
subunit-specific mechanism permits rapid and short-term modulation of
channel kinetics and activation-potential curves by synaptic and
metabolic alterations of cellular cAMP (DiFrancesco and Tortora, 1991 ;
Waigner et al., 2001 ).
HCNs are encoded by four characterized genes (Santoro et al.,
1997 , 1998 ; Gauss et al., 1998 ; Ludwig et al., 1998 ; Ishii et al.,
1999 ; Monteggia et al., 2000 ), three of which (HCN1,
HCN2, and HCN4) are expressed in rodent
hippocampus (Moosmang et al., 1999 ; Santoro et al., 2000 ; Bender et
al., 2001 ). Four HCN molecules of the same isoform type assemble to
form homomeric HCNs. Because the isoform composition of these channels
determines their physiological responses (S. Chen et al., 2001 ; Ulens
and Tytgat, 2001 ), we reasoned that long-term alteration in HCN
function may be attributable to modulation of HCN isoform
expression by prolonged experimental febrile seizures.
Therefore, we first analyzed HCN mRNA and protein expression in rat
hippocampus during the developmental age of febrile seizures and
demonstrated regional and neuronal specificity for the expression of
each HCN isoform. We established the coexpression of multiple HCNs in
individual pyramidal cells and interneurons in CA1 and CA3 and
proceeded to query whether the developmental febrile seizures regulated
HCN isoform gene expression patterns. We then examined whether the
mechanisms of such novel transcriptional regulation required intense
activation of the hippocampal circuit (seizures) or might be
attributable to the hyperthermia procedure itself. Finally, we
determined the specificity and duration of these seizure-induced effects for each hippocampal-expressed HCN isoform.
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MATERIALS AND METHODS |
Generation of developmental seizures. Prolonged
experimental febrile seizures were provoked as described previously
(Toth et al., 1998 ; Chen et al., 1999 ; Dubé et al., 2000 ;
Dubé, 2002 ), using immature rats during a hippocampal and
cortical developmental age generally equivalent to that of the human
infant and young child (Gottlieb et al., 1977 ; Herschkowitz et al.,
1997 ). Hyperthermia (i.e., increased body and brain temperatures) was
induced in 10- to 11-d-old Sprague Dawley rats using a warmed air
stream directed ~50 cm above the animals. Core temperatures were
measured before hyperthermia induction, at 2 min intervals, and at the
onset of hyperthermia-provoked seizures. These core temperatures have
been correlated with brain temperatures under the precise experimental conditions used (Dubé, 2002 ). After 30 min of hyperthermia,
calibrated to evoke ~20 min of seizures (Table
1), animals were moved to a cool surface
and then returned to their mothers. Hyperthermic controls were
generated by subjecting littermates to the same hyperthermia procedure,
but blocking the resulting seizures using the rapid and short acting
barbiturate pentobarbital. The dose used (30 mg/kg, i.p.) was
sufficient to prevent the hyperthermia-induced electrographic and
behavioral seizures yet led to a short (typically <1 hr) effect (e.g.,
sedation). Little evidence of dehydration was observed from this mild
procedure (<3% loss of body weight), and animals rapidly regained
normal activity, including suckling (Dubé, 2002 ). An additional,
normothermic control group was used as well.
Longer hippocampal seizures (lasting ~180 min) (Table 1) were induced
in immature rats of the same age using the glutamate receptor agonist
kainate, as described previously (Brunson et al., 1998 ). The dose used
(1.2 mg/kg, i.p.) resulted in limbic hyperexcitability and in
electrographic as well as behavioral seizures (Tremblay et al., 1984 ;
Brunson et al., 1998 ) (Table 1).
To confirm the hippocampal origin of the behavioral seizures provoked
by these procedures and to correlate behavioral with electrophysiological parameters, a separate group of rats was implanted
with bipolar electrodes directed to the dorsal hippocampus as described
previously (Brunson et al., 1998 ; Dubé et al., 2000 ). Hippocampal
EEGs were recorded from these behaving animals before and during
hyperthermia- or kainate-induced seizures and also served to confirm
the activity-blocking actions of pentobarbital. The brains of these
animals were not harvested for analysis.
Tissue harvesting and processing. Animals (n = 119 total; 7-10 per group per procedure per age) were killed
as described for each procedure. For radioactive in situ
hybridization (ISH), animals were decapitated within minutes of the
investigators' entering the animal facility, to minimize potential
effects of stress-related neuronal activation (Baram and Hatalski,
1998 ). Brains were rapidly dissected on powdered dry ice and stored and
handled as described previously (Eghbal-Ahmadi et al., 1999 ), with the
exception that cryostat sections (20 µm) were divided into
anatomically matched series. For immunocytochemistry (ICC), fluorescent
in situ hybridization, and combined analyses, animals were
perfused and brains were handled as described previously (Bender et
al., 2001 ; Y. Chen et al., 2001 ).
ICC. HCN ICC was performed on free-floating sections (20 µm) using standard avidin-biotin complex methods as described
previously (Y. Chen et al., 2001 ). Briefly, after several washes with
0.01 M PBS containing 0.3% Triton X-100
(PBS-T), pH 7.4, sections were treated for 30 min in 0.3%
H2O2/PBS, followed by
blockade of nonspecific sites with 2% normal goat serum in PBS for 30 min. After rinsing, sections were incubated for 36 hr at 4°C with
rabbit anti-HCN1 or anti-HCN2 serum (1:4000 and 1:2000, respectively;
Chemicon, Temecula, CA) in PBS containing 1% bovine serum albumin
(BSA) and washed three times in PBS-T for 5 min. Sections were
incubated in biotinylated goat-anti-rabbit IgG (1:200; Vector
Laboratories, Burlingame, CA) in PBS for 1 hr at room temperature.
After washing three times for 5 min, sections were incubated in the
avidin-biotin-peroxidase complex solution (1:100; Vector
Laboratories) for 2 hr and then rinsed three times for 5 min; the
reaction product was visualized by incubating the sections in 0.04%
3,3'-diaminobenzidine containing 0.01%
H2O2. The specificity of
the HCN antisera was evaluated in several ways. First, elimination of
the primary antibody resulted in a loss of all signal. In addition, the
concordance of the immunoreactivity of each HCN isoform with the
specific cell populations expressing the cognate mRNA in immature rats
was determined (Bender et al., 2001 ). Finally, the distribution of the
immunoreactivity was also compared with previous publications (Santoro
and Tibbs, 1999 ). Thus, no HCN1 immunoreactivity was evident in the
thalamus, whereas strong HCN2 signal was observed in the thalamic
nucleus reticularis, shown to express this subunit isoform exclusively
(Santoro et al., 2000 ; data not shown).
Fluorescent ISH. To examine for the presence of a specific
HCN isoform in individual, neurochemically defined neurons, fluorescent ISH of HCN subunit/isoforms was performed, modified from the published nonradioactive ISH procedures (Bender et al., 2001 ; Y. Chen et al.,
2001 ). Briefly, antisense and sense riboprobes were generated from
transcription vectors containing cDNA of mouse HCN1 (corresponding to
amino acids 636-722), HCN2 (322-481), or HCN4 (400-690) and labeled
with digoxigenin (DIG). ISH was performed on free-floating sections (20 µm) that were washed in 2× SSC for 30 min and then subjected
to an additional 30 min incubation in a solution composed of 2×
SSC/prehybridization solution (1:1). Prehybridization took place for 1 hr at 65°C in a humid chamber. For hybridization, digoxigenin-labeled
RNA probes were added (final concentration, ~10 ng/ml
prehybridization buffer) and sections were incubated at 65°C for 16 hr. After hybridization, sections were subjected to washes of
increasing stringency, consisting of 2× SSC at room temperature (twice
for 15 min), 50% formamide/2× SSC at 70°C for 60 min, 50%
formamide/0.1× SSC at 70°C for 60 min, and 0.1× SSC at 70°C for
30 min. Hybrid molecules were detected using a tyramide signal
amplification technique (Hunyady et al., 1996 ) and a fluorescent reporter (Cy3 or FITC). Briefly, after several washes with 0.01 M PBS-T, pH 7.4, sections were treated for 30 min
in 0.3% H2O2/PBS, followed
by blockade of nonspecific sites with 2% normal goat serum in PBS for
30 min. After rinsing, sections were incubated overnight at 4°C with
anti-DIG mouse antibody (1:1000; Roche, Indianapolis, IN) in PBS
containing 1% BSA and then washed in PBS-T three times for 5 min.
Sections were incubated in freshly prepared 0.5% blocking buffer
(Perkin-Elmer, Boston, MA) for 30 min at room temperature, followed by
incubation with horseradish peroxidase (HRP)-conjugated anti-mouse IgG
(1:500; Molecular Probes, Eugene, OR) in 0.5% blocking buffer for 2 hr. After washing (three times for 5 min), sections were incubated in
the dark for no longer than 10 min with tyramide conjugated to the
fluorophore (Perkin-Elmer), diluted 1:75 in amplification buffer, and
washed with PBS-T. The specificity of the probes and of the amplified
signal was verified by substituting labeled sense probe for the
antisense probe and by omitting either the antisense probe or the
HRP-conjugated anti-mouse IgG, respectively. No labeling was observed
under these conditions (see also Bender et al., 2001 ).
Fluorescent ISH combined with fluorescent ICC. To determine
whether multiple HCN isoforms were colocalized in an individual neuron
and to establish the neurochemical identity of neurons expressing HCNs,
the ISH procedure described above was combined with ICC. Specifically,
free-floating sections (20 µm) were first processed for HCN2 or HCN1
fluorescent ISH according to the protocol described above. Sections
were rinsed and incubated overnight at 4°C with rabbit anti-HCN1
antiserum (1:2000) or mouse anti-parvalbumin monoclonal antibody
(1:50,000; Sigma, St. Louis, MO). Immunoreactivity was visualized using
goat anti-rabbit (or anti-mouse) IgG conjugated to Alexa Fluor 568 (1:400; Molecular Probes) in PBS containing 1% BSA. To evaluate the
possibility of altered sensitivity or specificity attributable to
combined ISH-ICC, sections processed for this combined procedure were
compared with matched sections processed for ICC or ISH alone. No
differences in intensity, distribution, or number of labeled cells were observed.
For all methods using fluorophore, sections were initially viewed using
a Nikon (Tokyo, Japan) Eclipse E400 epifluorescence microscope
equipped with fluorescein, rhodamine, and
4',6'-diamidino-2-phenylindole-FITC-tetramethylrhodamine isothiocyanate filter sets. Images were obtained using an
Olympus Fluoview confocal microscope (FV300-IX; Olympus Optical, Tokyo, Japan) and acquired in Adobe Photoshop format (Adobe Systems, San Jose, CA).
Semiquantitative ISH. Relative quantitative analysis of HCN
mRNA levels was accomplished using radioactively labeled ISH probes and
calibration standards, under conditions of signal linearity (Eghbal-Ahmadi et al., 1999 ; Brunson et al., 2001 ). Briefly, the ISH
was performed as described above and in previous publications (Bender
et al., 2001 ), with the exception that probes were radiolabeled, requiring minor procedural modifications: the ISH was performed on
slide-mounted frozen sections (20 µm) as detailed previously (Eghbal-Ahmadi et al., 1999 ). To ascertain the isoform specificity of
the hybridization, the reaction was performed at 55°C followed by
washes, the most stringent of which was with 0.03× SSC at 62°C for
60 min.
Data acquisition and analysis. Data acquisition and analysis
were performed as described previously (Eghbal-Ahmadi et al., 1999 ;
Brunson et al., 2001 ) on sections run concurrently, and always without
knowledge of treatment. The significance level for t tests
and ANOVA was set at 0.05, and data are presented as means ± SEs.
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RESULTS |
HCN mRNA and protein are widely and selectively expressed in
immature rat hippocampus in an age-specific pattern
Of the four characterized HCN subunit genes, HCN1, HCN2, and HCN4
mRNAs are expressed in the developing rat hippocampal formation as
early as postnatal day 2 (P2) (Bender et al., 2001 ). During postnatal
development and particularly during the period when experimental
febrile seizures influence hippocampal excitability (~P10-P20), both
the mRNA and protein of these three HCN subunits are expressed in
isoform-specific patterns involving
select hippocampal regions and cell populations (see Figs. 1,
2, 4) (Bender et al., 2001 ). As shown in
these figures, excellent correlation exists between the expression of
these channel molecules at the mRNA and protein levels. In general,
expression of HCN1 is higher than those of HCN2 and HCN4 (Figs. 1,
A vs D, 4, A vs B,C). More
specifically, high protein expression of HCN1 occurs throughout the CA1
pyramidal cell layer (Fig. 1A,B), including pyramidal
cells as well as parvalbumin-expressing, basket cell-type interneurons
(Figs. 1B, arrows and
arrowheads, respectively, 2E,F).
This correlates well with HCN1 mRNA expression patterns at the
layer/regional and the single-cell resolutions (see Figs. 4 and
2A,C, respectively). In addition, expression of HCN1
protein in the dendritic fields of CA1 pyramidal cells is apparent
(Fig. 1A, asterisks).

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Figure 1.
Expression patterns of HCN1 and HCN2
immunoreactivity in the hippocampal formation of the immature rat.
A-C, HCN1; D-F, HCN2. A,
Low-magnification overview of HCN1 protein expression using
immunocytochemistry, demonstrating this HCN isoform in the pyramidal
cell layers of both CA1 and CA3. B, C, Detail of
CA1 and CA3, respectively, demonstrating that the HCN1 isoform is
expressed at the protein level in both pyramidal cells
[arrows and insets; note the thick
cytoplasmic band (boxed areas in A) of signal;
see also Fig. 2] and interneurons (arrowheads). Note
that in general, immunoreactivity in pyramidal cell somata is weaker
than in interneurons, consistent with the distribution of channel
proteins to the pyramidal cell dendritic fields
(asterisks in A). D,
Low-magnification view of HCN2 protein, revealing generally lower
expression levels of this isoform. E, F, Detail
of the CA1 and CA3 pyramidal cell layer (boxed areas in
D), respectively, showing expression of the HCN2 isoform in
individual eccentric, strongly labeled, presumed interneurons
(arrowheads) as well as the much weaker expression in
pyramidal cells (arrows and insets).
Scale bars: A, D, 600 µm; B, C, E, F,
200 µm; insets, ~60 µm.
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Figure 2.
Individual hippocampal principal cells and
interneurons coexpress HCN1 and HCN2. A-C,
Parvalbumin-expressing basket cells in hippocampal CA1 of the
immature rat coexpress mRNA for HCN1 (HCN1 mRNA). A,
ISH reveals expression of HCN1 mRNA in large neurons within the
CA1 pyramidal cell layer (arrow and
arrowhead). B, Parvalbumin ICC of the
same section delineates a parvalbumin-immunoreactive interneuron
(arrowhead) as well as the network of axonal boutons
innervating parvalbumin-negative pyramidal neurons
(arrows). C, The merged image of these
confocal microscope sections (see Materials and Methods) demonstrates
the coexpression of parvalbumin and HCN1 mRNA in the basket cell
(arrowhead) as well as HCN1 expression in
parvalbumin-negative presumed pyramidal cells (arrow).
D-F, HCN1 protein is coexpressed with HCN2 in
individual CA1 pyramidal cell layer neurons. D, ISH
demonstrates HCN2 mRNA in the perinuclear cytoplasm of CA1 neurons
(arrows). E, ICC demonstrates cytoplasmic
HCN1 protein (arrows); the immunoreactivity pattern
here, involving broad cytoplasmic patches, can be clearly distinguished
from the delicate strands of parvalbumin-immunoreactive interneuronal
processes (shown in B). F, The merged
image reveals coexpression of both HCN isoforms in individual neurons
(arrows), with mRNA generally confined to the
perinuclear cytoplasm, versus the peripheral/membranous localization of
the channel protein. G-I, Coexpression of HCN1 and HCN2
is also found in CA3. G, HCN2 mRNA; H, HCN1
protein; I, merged image. Scale bar, 20 µm.
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The HCN1 isoform is also expressed in the pyramidal cell layer of the
CA3 region of the immature rat hippocampus, in both pyramidal cells and
interneurons (Figs. 1A,C, 2G,I).
The figures also demonstrate that in the P18 rat, CA3 interneuronal
HCN1 expression exceeds the clearly visible pyramidal cell signal
(Figs. 1C, 2H,I). This may be
contrasted with the adult hippocampus, where HCN1 is not detectable in
CA3 pyramidal cells (Santoro et al., 2000 ; Bender et al., 2001 ),
indicating a strong developmental regulation of these channel genes.
HCN2 isoform expression is evident in CA1 and CA3 at both the mRNA and
protein levels. Figure 1D demonstrates a low
magnification overview, delineating a rather homogenous HCN2
immunoreactivity in both subfields. This is in concordance with the
comparable mRNA levels of HCN2 in CA1 and CA3 (see Fig.
4B). Higher-magnification views of CA1 (Fig.
1E) and CA3 (Fig. 1F), providing
single-cell resolution, illustrate the higher HCN2 signal intensity in
presumed interneuronal profiles. The in situ hybridization
patterns (Fig. 2D,F,G,I) demonstrate HCN2 mRNA
expression in pyramidal cells and in basket cells of both CA fields, in
good agreement with the immunocytochemistry.
The cellular HCN phenotype of individual CA1 and CA3 pyramidal
cell layer neurons includes both HCN1 and HCN2
If developmental seizures are to result in an altered cellular HCN
phenotype of individual neurons within specific hippocampal cell
populations, then coexpression of multiple isoforms leading to a
repertoire of homomeric HCN1 and HCN2 channels within the individual
cell should be demonstrable. Figure 2 shows double labeling for the two
HCN isoforms within individual hippocampal CA1 and CA3 neurons. First,
the expression of HCN1 mRNA in both parvalbumin-positive interneurons
and parvalbumin-lacking pyramidal cells is shown, using thin sections
and confocal microscopy to avoid neuronal overlay (Fig.
2A-C). Next, combined ISH and ICC demonstrate the
coexpression of HCN1 and HCN2 mRNA in individual CA1 neurons,
highlighting the perinuclear mRNA aggregates (Fig. 2D, arrows) and the more peripheral
distribution of the cytoplasmic protein signal (Fig.
2E, arrows, F, merged
image). Coexpression of the two HCN isoforms (HCN2 mRNA and HCN1
protein) is also clearly apparent in individual CA3 pyramidal cell
layer neurons (Fig. 2I, merged image).
Thus, in the immature rat hippocampus, HCN1 and HCN2 are colocalized to
individual pyramidal and interneuronal cells in the CA1 and CA3
pyramidal cell layers. Alteration of the expression of these isoforms
by intense neuronal activity such as seizures should thus influence the
cellular repertoire of HCNs, which are significantly governed at the
mRNA level (Franz et al., 2000 ). In fact, such alteration in the
properties of the current generated by these channels by prolonged
experimental febrile seizures was demonstrated in previous
electrophysiological studies of these seizures (K. Chen et al.,
2001 ).
Experimental febrile seizures lead to intense activation of the
hippocampal circuit
The hyperthermia procedure, as well as the administration of
kainate, led to both electrophysiological and behavioral seizures (Table 1; Fig. 3). As shown in Table 1,
hyperthermia (defined as a core temperature of >39°C) led to
seizures of ~22.8 min duration. As described previously, these limbic
seizures were characterized by a myoclonic jerk, which was followed by
immobility associated with impaired ability to respond to stimuli and
interspersed with limbic automatisms. The hippocampal electrographic
(EEG) correlates of these seizures are shown in Figure 3B,
demonstrating trains of spikes and spike waves with increasing
amplitude emanating from the hippocampal electrodes. Administration of
pentobarbital immediately before hyperthermia blocked both
electrographic and behavioral seizures (Fig. 3, compare C
with B). The short-acting barbiturate reduced the amplitude
of the baseline hippocampal EEG transiently, but in concordance with
the behavior, the EEG of these hyperthermic controls normalized within
1 hr. It should be noted that the extent and duration of the
hyperthermia per se did not differ between the hyperthermic controls
and the group experiencing experimental febrile seizures. Hyperthermic
controls thus served to distinguish the effects of hyperthermic
(febrile) seizures from the potential effects of hyperthermia per se
(Toth et al., 1998 ; Dubé et al., 2000 ). The short-acting
barbiturate, the behavioral effects of which disappeared within 1 hr,
was chosen to minimize or obviate potential neuroprotective
effects.

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Figure 3.
Hippocampal recordings of experimental febrile
seizures and those generated by kainate. Tracings from bipolar,
chronically implanted electrodes in behaving 11-d-old rats demonstrate
normal background activity (A). B,
The hyperthermia procedure (see Materials and Methods) provoked
hippocampal electrographic seizures, manifested as trains of spike
waves. C, Preadministration of pentobarbital prevented
these hyperthermia-induced seizures. D, Longer
hippocampal electrographic seizures were induced by systemic
administration of kainate. The evolution of increasing-amplitude
spike-wave trains is seen. Calibration: 100 µV, 1 sec.
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Kainate resulted in hippocampal status epilepticus (i.e.,
electrographic and behavioral seizures lasting almost 3 hr) (Table 1;
Fig. 3D). The behavioral manifestations of these seizures have been extensively described previously (Tremblay et al., 1984 ; Holmes et al., 1988 ; Brunson et al., 1998 ). Repetitive trains of
high-amplitude spikes and spike waves, denoting electrographic seizures, are shown in Figure 3D.
HCN expression is modulated by experimental prolonged febrile
seizures with isoform and regional specificities
Experimental febrile seizures resulted in alteration of HCN gene
expression as measured using semiquantitative ISH (Eghbal-Ahmadi et
al., 1999 ; Brunson et al., 2001 ). Levels of HCN1 mRNA, encoding a fast
activating and deactivating, low-conductance channel were significantly
reduced in the CA1 pyramidal cell layer 1 week after the seizures. This
effect was region-specific and not observed in CA3 (Fig.
4A). In contrast to
this seizure-induced downregulation of HCN1, levels of HCN2 mRNA,
encoding slower activating and deactivating channels, were increased.
As shown in Figure 4B, experimental febrile seizures
augmented HCN2 expression in both CA1 and CA3 pyramidal cell layers.
The isoform specificity of this seizure-induced HCN modulation was also
highlighted by the HCN4 data: seizures had no significant effect on
this transcript in either hippocampal field (Fig. 4C). The
photomicrograph in Figure 4C illustrates the unique
expression of the HCN4 isoform in the medial habenula (Fig.
4C, asterisk) and the specificity of the ISH
procedure (Bender et al., 2001 ). Thus, experimental febrile seizures
reduced HCN1 expression and enhanced HCN2 mRNA levels in select
hippocampal regions, without appreciable alteration of steady-state
HCN4 mRNA.

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Figure 4.
Experimental prolonged febrile seizures modulate
the expression of HCN subunit isoform in a region- and isoform-specific
manner. HCN mRNA levels were quantified after in situ
hybridization analysis (see Materials and Methods). A,
Compared with controls, HCN1 mRNA levels of experimental animals
(HT-seizures) were significantly
(asterisks) reduced in CA1 (arrowheads) but
not CA3a. B, Levels of HCN2 mRNA, coding for
slower-kinetics channels, were increased by the seizures in both CA1
and CA3 pyramidal cell layers. C, No significant changes
in HCN4 mRNA levels were induced by the seizures. The
asterisks in the photomicrograph denote the unique
expression of the HCN4 isoform in the medial habenula.
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Seizures rather than hyperthermia per se alter HCN expression in a
duration-dependent manner
Experimental febrile seizures are generated by increasing the
brain temperature of the immature rat (Toth et al., 1998 ; Dubé et
al., 2000 ). To examine for the possibility that this hyperthermia in
and of itself was required and sufficient to modulate HCN at the
transcriptional level, we subjected a separate experimental animal
group to identical duration and intensity of hyperthermia, while
eliminating the seizures using a rapid-acting, short-duration barbiturate. As shown in Table 1, the hyperthermic stimulus did not
differ between the seizure-experiencing and the hyperthermic control
groups. However, eliminating the seizures (Fig. 3) abolished the
alterations in HCN mRNA levels (Fig. 5).
These findings indicate that hyperthermia per se is not sufficient to
regulate HCN expression in the immature rat hippocampus.

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Figure 5.
The mechanism of HCN mRNA regulation requires
seizures rather than hyperthermia and depends on seizure duration.
Quantitative analyses of HCN1 and HCN2 mRNAs, to dissect out the
contributions of the hyperthermia procedure versus those of the
resulting seizures, are shown. A, B, HCN1 expression was
reduced by hyperthermia-induced seizures (HT-seizures)
in CA1 but not CA3. Blocking the seizures in a group of animals
undergoing the same duration and magnitude of hyperthermia
[pentobarbital and hyperthermia (PB & HT)
group; Table 1] abolished these changes in HCN1. Longer seizures
induced by kainate (Table 1) led to more robust modulation of HCN1
expression, also reducing mRNA levels in CA3. C, D,
Enhanced HCN2 expression by hyperthermic seizures, found in both CA1
and CA3a pyramidal cell layers, required seizures (i.e., intense
neuronal activation). This modulation of HCN expression was not
specific to the experimental febrile seizures: prolonged
kainate-induced seizures led to the same result. Correlation of HCN
expression with seizure duration was found for both HCN1
(A) and HCN2 (C, D) using ANOVA
(see Results). *Significantly different from the control group.
SEMs of the control groups in B (0.54%)
and D (0.1%) are poorly visualized.
|
|
To further delineate the role of synchronized neuronal firing
(seizures) and to determine whether the consequences of such activity on HCN expression were unique to experimental febrile seizures, we induced prolonged seizures using the glutamate receptor agonist kainate (Tremblay et al., 1984 ; Holmes et al., 1988 ; Brunson et
al., 1998 ). Similar to experimental febrile seizures, kainate resulted
in intense hippocampal circuit activation, apparent from electrophysiological (Fig. 3) and behavioral (Brunson et al., 1998 )
measures. These seizures lasted ~3 hr compared with the shorter,
~20 min hyperthermia-induced activity (Table 1).
Kainate-induced seizures influenced HCN isoform
mRNA expression in a pattern concordant with the one resulting from
experimental febrile seizures, and to a greater extent (Fig. 5; effect
of seizure duration, p < 0.05; one way ANOVA). These
findings establish a dose effect for the duration of hippocampal
seizures on HCN expression. In addition, they demonstrate that
hyperthermia is not required for this activity-dependent regulation of
HCN expression in immature rat hippocampal neurons.
Seizure-induced modulation of HCN expression is long-lasting
The enhanced susceptibility to excitatory limbic stimuli induced
by experimental febrile seizures in immature rats persisted through
adulthood (Dubé et al., 2000 ). This was also the case for the
functional alterations in HCN physiology after the seizures (K. Chen et
al., 2001 ). The seizures may evoke transient alterations of HCN subunit
expression, which are sufficient to activate "downstream" permanent
changes in channel function. Alternatively, seizure-induced modulation
of the expression of one or more HCN isoforms might be persistent,
underlying functional changes in HCN currents and in hippocampal
network excitability. As shown in Figure
6, reduced HCN1 expression in CA1 was
still evident in adult rats that had experienced hyperthermic seizures
early in life. The regional specificity of this modulation remained as
well. It should be noted that the robust ISH signal of HCN1 in the CA3
pyramidal cell layer of these adult rats seems to be localized to
interneurons (Santoro et al., 2000 ; Bender et al., 2001 ).

View larger version (14K):
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|
Figure 6.
Changes in HCN1 expression induced by early life
prolonged experimental febrile seizures are long lasting, whereas those
in HCN2 are not. HCN mRNA levels were quantified after in
situ hybridization analysis (see Materials and Methods) in
animals 3 months after the seizures. A, Compared with
controls, HCN1 mRNA levels of adult experimental animals
(HT-seizures) were significantly
(asterisk) reduced in CA1 but not CA3a. This
is the same specific pattern found within 1 week of the seizures (Fig.
4A). Note that the high HCN1 mRNA signal over CA3
reflects interneuronal expression (Santoro et al., 2000 ; Bender et al.,
2001 ): the resolution of the film autoradiograms does not permit
distinguishing interneuronal expression (Brunson et al., 2001 ).
B, Levels of HCN2 mRNA do not differ in CA1 or CA3 of
adult control rats compared with those experiencing experimental
febrile seizures early in life.
|
|
 |
DISCUSSION |
The major findings of these studies are: (1) During a critical
developmental phase of hippocampal connectivity, HCN mRNA and protein
are expressed in a highly isoform-specific and neuron-selective manner,
and individual pyramidal cells and interneurons express multiple HCN
subunit isoforms; (2) prolonged experimental febrile seizures reduce
HCN1 mRNA and enhance HCN2 mRNA in specific hippocampal neuronal
populations, and (3) the mechanisms of these long-lasting modulations
require intense hippocampal circuit activity, in a duration-dependent
manner. Together with the previous demonstration of seizure-induced
alteration of HCN function, these data indicate a novel isoform- and
region-specific transcriptional regulation that modifies the HCN
phenotype of specific hippocampal neuronal populations long term and is
associated with profound consequences for the excitability of the
hippocampal network.
The hyperpolarization-activated ion channels contribute to the
maintenance of hippocampal neuronal membrane potential (Lupica et al.,
2001 ) and to the slow depolarizing phase of at least some spontaneously
firing hippocampal interneurons (Maccaferri and McBain, 1996 ). In
vivo, the protein products of each of the four characterized HCN
genes assemble to form homomeric channels (each comprised of four
subunit molecules) with distinctive kinetics profiles and different
regulation by cyclic nucleotides (Santoro and Tibbs, 1999 ).
In the hippocampus, the cellular HCN phenotype of pyramidal cells and
interneurons is consistent with a major contribution of the HCN1
isoform (Franz et al., 2000 ; Santoro et al., 2000 ). This gene encodes
channels with rapid activation and deactivation kinetics and limited
conductance. Although HCN2 and HCN4, encoding channels with slower
activation and deactivation kinetics, are expressed in both the mature
and developing rodent hippocampus (Moosmang et al., 1999 ; Santoro et
al., 2000 ; Bender et al., 2001 ), their contribution to the overall
cellular HCN physiology of hippocampal neurons appears relatively
minor. The findings here (Fig. 4), demonstrating higher mRNA expression
levels of HCN1 compared with the other isoforms in the CA1 and CA3 of
the immature rat hippocampus, provide a molecular basis for these
observations and further support the notion that the functional HCN
phenotype of individual neurons is governed significantly at the
transcriptional level (Franz et al., 2000 ; Santoro et al., 2000 ).
A complex evolution of the spatiotemporal expression patterns of the
HCNs takes place during hippocampal development, involving rapid,
age-dependent, and isoform-specific changes in both hippocampal principal cells and interneurons (Bender et al., 2001 ). As shown here,
multiple HCN isoforms are expressed in individual hippocampal neurons
already during development, with distinct and differing time courses.
These findings indicate that the HCN phenotype of specific hippocampal
cell populations is developmentally regulated and suggest that at
defined developmental phases, HCNs may play additional age-specific and
cell-selective roles in the organization and synchronization of the
hippocampal network.
Although the contribution of the HCNs to the organization and normal
function of neuronal networks has been increasingly recognized (Pape,
1996 ; Santoro and Tibbs, 1999 ), the potential role of abnormal expression of HCNs in hippocampal pathology germane to human disease has only been emerging recently (K. Chen et al., 2001 ). Elimination or
mutation of other ion channels may lead to hyperexcitable states, manifesting as spontaneous seizures (epilepsy) (Schroeder et al., 1998 ;
Burgess and Noebels, 1999 ). In addition, inherited abnormalities in
genes encoding several ion channels have been increasingly recognized
as causal in several human inherited disorders. Specifically, these
genetic "channelopathies," involving mutation in
Na+ (Wallace et al., 1998 ; Escayg et al.,
2000 ) or K+ (Biervert et al., 1998 ;
Charlier et al., 1998 ; Zuberi et al., 1999 ) channels, underlie several
human epilepsies. Previous electrophysiological studies implicated
acquired, functional changes in the HCNs as causal in the
proepileptogenic consequences of experimental febrile seizures on the
hippocampal network (K. Chen et al., 2001 ). Here we show that these
developmental seizures, as well as prolonged seizures induced by a
chemical convulsant, modulate HCN molecule expression transcriptionally
in a coordinated manner, favoring formation of such functionally
modified HCNs.
The mechanisms of this seizure-induced regulation of HCN expression
merit discussion. Transcriptional regulation of HCN gene expression has
been described in the heart, governed by thyroid hormone (Pachucki et
al., 1999 ). Because hyperthermia might influence thyroid hormone
levels, the possibility that potential hyperthermia-induced changes in
this hormone might contribute to the HCN expression changes shown here
cannot be entirely excluded. However, hyperthermia per se, when the
seizures were abolished, did not influence HCN expression significantly
(Table 1; Fig. 5). In addition, prolonged, kainate-induced seizures
without appreciable hyperthermia were sufficient to modulate HCN
expression, demonstrating that hyperthermia was not a major determinant
of this effect. Furthermore, the robust modulation of HCN expression by
the prolonged (~180 min) kainate-induced seizures compared with the
effects of the ~20 min, hyperthermia-induced activity supports the
notion that hippocampal circuit activity, rather than hyperthermia,
might be the key mechanism for this novel regulation of HCN expression
in the immature rat hippocampus.
The precise chain of events by which alterations of HCN expression and
function result in proepileptogenic effects on immature hippocampus
requires additional study. As mentioned above, the HCN phenotype of
normal hippocampal pyramidal cells reflects a preponderance of HCN1
channels. These might actually contribute to attenuating the impact of
dendritic excitatory input on pyramidal cell firing (Poolos and
Johnston, 2001 ). However, the seizure-induced modification of HCN
expression patterns shown here favors increased abundance of
slower-kinetics (potentially larger conductance) HCN2 channels in
affected neurons, promoting neuronal activity-dependent depolarization
and firing (K. Chen et al., 2001 ) and enhancing excitation in the
hippocampal circuit.
It is considered that although the long-term modulation of HCN
expression might critically contribute to the augmented hippocampal excitability and the susceptibility to additional seizures that were
found after experimental febrile seizures, the regulation of HCNs is
likely not the sole mechanisms for such changes. First, developmental
experimental febrile seizures lead to other proexcitatory changes in
the hippocampal network such as synaptic reorganization (Bender et al.,
2000 ) and alteration of glutamate receptor-mediated calcium
permeability (Eghbal-Ahmadi et al., 2001 ). In addition, HCN gene
modulation was also found after very prolonged developmental seizures
induced by kainate (Fig. 5). Although these seizures (during the
developmental age discussed here) have not been shown to be
proepileptogenic, they do cause significant changes in the function of
the hippocampal network, manifested by long-lasting impairment of
hippocampal-dependent learning and memory performance (Holmes et al.,
1988 ; Stafstrom et al., 1993 ; Lynch et al., 2000 , but see Sarkisian et
al., 1997 ). Whether the robust alterations of HCN expression patterns
after kainate-induced seizures contribute to these functional changes
should be a focus of further studies.
The persistence of the seizure-induced changes in expression of the
HCN1 subunit after relatively short developmental seizures is striking.
Work from several laboratories has demonstrated short-lived alterations
in several genes that contribute to the regulation of hippocampal
excitability after seizures occurring during the first two postnatal
weeks in the rat (Friedman et al., 1997 ; Hatalski et al., 2000 ; Sanchez
et al., 2001 ). However, the current data indicate that developmental
seizures may leave permanent marks on the repertoire of hippocampal
gene expression, with implications for hippocampal excitability.
Clearly, the final effect, in terms of susceptibility to additional
seizures or the development of frank spontaneous seizures (epilepsy),
would be a complex product of these and other independent or
compensatory changes in the network (Chen et al., 1999 ; Walker and
Kullmann, 1999 ). Finally, whether these changes also happen in humans
remains speculative, and whether early life seizures, generally
considered benign, modify the human hippocampus long term in a subtle
manner remains to be investigated.
In summary, the current studies demonstrate that developmental seizures
modify hippocampal HCN expression at the transcriptional level in a
highly isoform- and cell-specific manner. This constitutes a novel,
activity-dependent regulation of these genes in the CNS. Importantly,
these studies provide an additional perspective to the complexity of
the mechanisms by which early life seizures influence hippocampal
function long term.
Note added in proof. The report by Brauer et
al. (2001) , describing transient reduction of hippocampal HCN1, was
published after submission of this work.
 |
FOOTNOTES |
Received Jan. 6, 2002; revised March 12, 2002; accepted March 15, 2002.
*
A.B. and R.A.B. contributed equally to this work.
This work was supported by National Institutes of Health Grants NS
35439, NS 28912 (T.Z.B.), and NS28912-S1 (A.B.), and by a postdoctoral
research fellowship from the Epilepsy Foundation of America (R.A.B.).
We thank Dr. B. Santoro for critical and helpful discussions, Drs. A. Ludwig, F. Hofmann, and M. Biel for the HCN probes, and M. Hinojosa for
excellent editorial help.
Correspondence should be addressed to Dr. Tallie Z. Baram, Departments
of Anatomy/Neurobiology and Pediatrics, University of California at
Irvine, Med. Sci. I, 4475; UCI, Irvine, CA 92697-4475. E-mail:
tallie{at}uci.edu.
 |
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Postnatal Expression Pattern of HCN Channel Isoforms in Thalamic Neurons: Relationship to Maturation of Thalamocortical Oscillations
J. Neurosci.,
July 8, 2009;
29(27):
8847 - 8857.
[Abstract]
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M. Biel, C. Wahl-Schott, S. Michalakis, and X. Zong
Hyperpolarization-Activated Cation Channels: From Genes to Function
Physiol Rev,
July 1, 2009;
89(3):
847 - 885.
[Abstract]
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A. S. Lewis, E. Schwartz, C. Savio Chan, Y. Noam, M. Shin, W. J. Wadman, D. James Surmeier, T. Z. Baram, R. L. Macdonald, and D. M. Chetkovich
Alternatively Spliced Isoforms of TRIP8b Differentially Control h Channel Trafficking and Function
J. Neurosci.,
May 13, 2009;
29(19):
6250 - 6265.
[Abstract]
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S. Shinnar, D. C. Hesdorffer, D. R. Nordli Jr, J. M. Pellock, C. O'Dell, D. V. Lewis, L. M. Frank, S. L. Moshe, L. G. Epstein, A. Marmarou, et al.
Phenomenology of prolonged febrile seizures: Results of the FEBSTAT study
Neurology,
July 15, 2008;
71(3):
170 - 176.
[Abstract]
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M. A. Galic, K. Riazi, J. G. Heida, A. Mouihate, N. M. Fournier, S. J. Spencer, L. E. Kalynchuk, G. C. Teskey, and Q. J. Pittman
Postnatal Inflammation Increases Seizure Susceptibility in Adult Rats
J. Neurosci.,
July 2, 2008;
28(27):
6904 - 6913.
[Abstract]
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S. Jung, T. D. Jones, J. N. Lugo Jr, A. H. Sheerin, J. W. Miller, R. D'Ambrosio, A. E. Anderson, and N. P. Poolos
Progressive Dendritic HCN Channelopathy during Epileptogenesis in the Rat Pilocarpine Model of Epilepsy
J. Neurosci.,
November 21, 2007;
27(47):
13012 - 13021.
[Abstract]
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M. Shin and D. M. Chetkovich
Activity-dependent Regulation of h Channel Distribution in Hippocampal CA1 Pyramidal Neurons
J. Biol. Chem.,
November 9, 2007;
282(45):
33168 - 33180.
[Abstract]
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R. Sankar and J. M. Rho
Do Seizures Affect the Developing Brain? Lessons From the Laboratory
J Child Neurol,
May 1, 2007;
22(5_suppl):
21S - 29S.
[Abstract]
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R. A. Bender, T. Kirschstein, O. Kretz, A. L. Brewster, C. Richichi, C. Ruschenschmidt, R. Shigemoto, H. Beck, M. Frotscher, and T. Z. Baram
Localization of HCN1 Channels to Presynaptic Compartments: Novel Plasticity That May Contribute to Hippocampal Maturation
J. Neurosci.,
April 25, 2007;
27(17):
4697 - 4706.
[Abstract]
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A. L. Brewster, Y. Chen, R. A. Bender, A. Yeh, R. Shigemoto, and T. Z. Baram
Quantitative Analysis and Subcellular Distribution of mRNA and Protein Expression of the Hyperpolarization-Activated Cyclic Nucleotide-Gated Channels throughout Development in Rat Hippocampus
Cereb Cortex,
March 1, 2007;
17(3):
702 - 712.
[Abstract]
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M. Kuisle, N. Wanaverbecq, A. L. Brewster, S. G. A. Frere, D. Pinault, T. Z. Baram, and A. Luthi
Functional stabilization of weakened thalamic pacemaker channel regulation in rat absence epilepsy
J. Physiol.,
August 15, 2006;
575(1):
83 - 100.
[Abstract]
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J. R. Gibson, A. F. Bartley, and K. M. Huber
Role for the Subthreshold Currents ILeak and IH in the Homeostatic Control of Excitability in Neocortical Somatostatin-Positive Inhibitory Neurons
J Neurophysiol,
July 1, 2006;
96(1):
420 - 432.
[Abstract]
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C. Dube, C. Richichi, R. A. Bender, G. Chung, B. Litt, and T. Z. Baram
Temporal lobe epilepsy after experimental prolonged febrile seizures: prospective analysis
Brain,
April 1, 2006;
129(4):
911 - 922.
[Abstract]
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T. Budde, L. Caputi, T. Kanyshkova, R. Staak, C. Abrahamczik, T. Munsch, and H.-C. Pape
Impaired Regulation of Thalamic Pacemaker Channels through an Imbalance of Subunit Expression in Absence Epilepsy
J. Neurosci.,
October 26, 2005;
25(43):
9871 - 9882.
[Abstract]
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T. A Simeone, J. M Rho, and T. Z Baram
Single channel properties of hyperpolarization-activated cation currents in acutely dissociated rat hippocampal neurones
J. Physiol.,
October 15, 2005;
568(2):
371 - 380.
[Abstract]
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W. J. Moody and M. M. Bosma
Ion Channel Development, Spontaneous Activity, and Activity-Dependent Development in Nerve and Muscle Cells
Physiol Rev,
July 1, 2005;
85(3):
883 - 941.
[Abstract]
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B. Santoro, B. J. Wainger, and S. A. Siegelbaum
Regulation of HCN Channel Surface Expression by a Novel C-Terminal Protein-Protein Interaction
J. Neurosci.,
November 24, 2004;
24(47):
10750 - 10762.
[Abstract]
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T. Kobayashi, C. Good, J. Biedermann, C. Barnes, R. D. Skinner, and E. Garcia-Rill
Developmental Changes in Pedunculopontine Nucleus (PPN) Neurons
J Neurophysiol,
April 1, 2004;
91(4):
1470 - 1481.
[Abstract]
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B. E. Porter, A. R. Judkins, R. R. Clancy, A. Duhaime, D. J. Dlugos, and J. A. Golden
Dysplasia: A common finding in intractable pediatric temporal lobe epilepsy
Neurology,
August 12, 2003;
61(3):
365 - 368.
[Abstract]
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R. A. Bender, S. V. Soleymani, A. L. Brewster, S. T. Nguyen, H. Beck, G. W. Mathern, and T. Z. Baram
Enhanced Expression of a Specific Hyperpolarization-Activated Cyclic Nucleotide-Gated Cation Channel (HCN) in Surviving Dentate Gyrus Granule Cells of Human and Experimental Epileptic Hippocampus
J. Neurosci.,
July 30, 2003;
23(17):
6826 - 6836.
[Abstract]
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H. S. White
Animal models of epileptogenesis
Neurology,
November 12, 2002;
59(90095):
S7 - 14.
[Abstract]
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