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The Journal of Neuroscience, May 1, 2002, 22(9):3795-3805
Stress-Induced Deoxycorticosterone-Derived Neurosteroids Modulate
GABAA Receptor Function and Seizure Susceptibility
Doodipala S.
Reddy and
Michael A.
Rogawski
Epilepsy Research Section, National Institute of Neurological
Disorders and Stroke, National Institutes of Health, Bethesda, Maryland
20892
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ABSTRACT |
Stress affects seizure susceptibility in animals and humans,
but the underlying mechanisms are obscure. Here, we provide evidence that GABAA receptor-modulating neurosteroids derived from
deoxycorticosterone (DOC) play a role in stress-related changes in
seizure control. DOC, an adrenal steroid whose synthesis is enhanced
during stress, undergoes sequential metabolic reduction by
5 -reductase and 3 -hydroxysteroid oxidoreductase to form
5 -dihydrodeoxycorticosterone (DHDOC) and allotetrahydrodeoxycorticosterone (THDOC), a GABAA
receptor-modulating neurosteroid with anticonvulsant properties. Acute
swim stress in rats significantly elevated plasma THDOC concentrations
and raised the pentylenetetrazol (PTZ) seizure threshold. Small
systemic doses of DOC produced comparable increases in THDOC and PTZ
seizure threshold. Pretreatment with finasteride, a 5 -reductase
inhibitor that blocks the conversion of DOC to DHDOC, reversed the
antiseizure effects of stress. DOC also elevated plasma THDOC levels
and protected mice against PTZ,
methyl-6,7-dimethoxy-4-ethyl- -carboline-3-carboxylate, picrotoxin,
and amygdala-kindled seizures in mice (ED50 values, 84-97
mg/kg). Finasteride reversed the antiseizure activity of DOC
(ED50, 7.2 mg/kg); partial antagonism was also
obtained with indomethacin (100 mg/kg), an inhibitor of
3 -hydroxysteroid oxidoreductase. Finasteride had no effect on
seizure protection by DHDOC and THDOC, whereas indomethacin partially
reversed DHDOC but not THDOC. DHDOC, like THDOC, potentiated
GABA-activated Cl currents in cultured hippocampal
neurons ( 1 µM) and directly activated GABAA
receptor currents ( 1 µM), compatible with a role for
DHDOC in the antiseizure activity of DOC. DOC is a mediator of the
physiological effects of acute stress that could contribute to
stress-induced changes in seizure susceptibility through its conversion
to neurosteroids with modulatory actions on GABAA receptors including THDOC and possibly also DHDOC.
Key words:
stress; seizure; pentylenetetrazol; kindling; neurosteroid; deoxycorticosterone; 5 -dihydrodeoxycorticosterone; 5 ,3 tetrahydrodeoxycorticosterone
(3 ,21-dihydroxy-5 -pregnan-20-one); finasteride; indomethacin; GABAA receptor
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INTRODUCTION |
Neurosteroids such as the
progesterone metabolite allopregnanolone
(3 -hydroxy-5 -pregnane-20-one) and the deoxycorticosterone (DOC)
metabolite allotetrahydrodeoxycorticosterone (THDOC;
3 ,21-dihydroxy-5 -pregnan-20-one) are powerful endogenous positive
modulators of GABAA receptors with
anticonvulsant, anxiolytic, and sedative properties (Crawley et al.,
1986 ; Bitran et al., 1991 ; Kokate et al., 1994 ; Lambert et al., 1995 ;
Reddy and Kulkarni, 2000 ). Although there is emerging evidence that
allopregnanolone has a role in the pathophysiology of menstrual
cycle-related disorders such as catamenial epilepsy (Reddy and
Rogawski, 2000 ; Reddy et al., 2001 ) and premenstrual syndrome (Smith et
al., 1998 ), the clinical importance of THDOC remains unclear. THDOC is
synthesized from DOC, an adrenal steroid, by two sequential A-ring
reductions. 5 -Reductase isoenzymes first convert DOC to the
intermediate 5 -dihydrodeoxycorticosterone (DHDOC), which is
then further reduced by 3 -hydroxysteroid oxidoreductase to form
THDOC (Fig. 1). In contrast to
allopregnanolone, which is present in the brain even after
adrenalectomy and gonadectomy, THDOC appears to be derived nearly
exclusively from adrenal sources (Purdy et al., 1991 ).

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Figure 1.
Sequential enzymatic conversion of DOC to DHDOC
and THDOC by 5 -reductase and 3 -hydroxysteroid
oxidoreductase. Finasteride is a specific irreversible inhibitor of
5 -reductase; indomethacin competitively blocks 3 -hydroxysteroid
oxidoreductase.
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Adrenocorticotrophic hormone, released by the activation of the
hypothalamic-pituitary-adrenal axis, is a key coordinator of
neuroendocrine and behavioral responses to stress. Although DOC is an
intermediate in aldosterone synthesis in the adrenal zona glomerulosa
and itself has weak mineralocorticoid activity, much more DOC is
produced in the zona fasciculata, where its synthesis is under the
control of adrenocorticotrophic hormone, and its secretion correlates
with that of glucocorticoids and not aldosterone (Tan and Mulrow, 1975 ;
Kater et al., 1989 ). Thus, in addition to its well recognized role as a
mineralocorticoid precursor, there is substantial evidence that DOC
participates in the hypothalamic-pituitary-adrenal axis response to
acute stress. Presumably because of enhanced DOC availability, acute
stressors such as swimming, foot shock, or carbon dioxide exposure
elicit an increase in THDOC concentrations in plasma and brain (Purdy
et al., 1991 ; Barbaccia et al., 1996 , 1997 ; Serra et al., 2000 ; Vallee
et al., 2000 ). It has therefore been proposed that THDOC, through its
actions on GABAA receptors, could play a
physiological role in mediating the effects of stress on CNS function.
Although the underlying mechanisms are poorly understood, it is well
recognized that emotional stress can be a factor affecting seizure
control in temporal lobe epilepsy and other seizure syndromes (Feldman
and Paul, 1976 ; Minter, 1979 ; Temkin and Davis, 1984 ; Frucht et al.,
2000 ). Moreover, experimental stress, including swim stress, has
anticonvulsant effects in animals (Goldberg and Salama,
1969 ; Soubrie et al., 1980 ; Abel and Berman, 1993 ; Peri i et al., 2000 , 2001 ). THDOC exhibits anticonvulsant activity in a
variety of animal seizure models (Kokate et al., 1994 , 1996 ), and it is
attractive to speculate that DOC-derived THDOC could play a role in the
effects of stress on seizure susceptibility. This would imply that DOC
itself should have anticonvulsant properties. In fact, shortly after
its isolation and chemical synthesis (von Steiger and Reichstein,
1937 ), DOC was reported to protect against pentylenetetrazol (PTZ)
seizures in rats (Selye, 1942 ; Craig, 1966 ). However, the mechanism of
this anticonvulsant action has remained obscure. In this study, we
investigate the role of DOC and its neurosteroid metabolite THDOC in
the regulation of seizure susceptibility by stress. Our results
demonstrate that the previously observed anticonvulsant activity of DOC
in the PTZ seizure model is attributable to its conversion to
neurosteroids that promote GABAergic synaptic inhibition. Moreover,
this pathway is likely to be physiologically relevant in mediating the
effects of stress on seizure susceptibility.
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MATERIALS AND METHODS |
Animal testing and plasma THDOC determinations
Animals. Male Sprague Dawley rats (250-300 gm) were
purchased from Taconic (Germantown, NY). Male National Institutes of
Health (NIH) Swiss mice (25-30 gm) were obtained from the NIH animal program. Male adrenalectomized Swiss mice were purchased from Taconic.
Animals were allowed to acclimatize with access to food and water
ad libitum for at least 24 hr before use and were
group-housed under a 12 hr light/dark cycle in an environmentally
controlled animal facility. All procedures were performed in strict
compliance with the NIH Guide for the Care and Use of Laboratory
Animals under a protocol approved by the National Institutes of
Neurological Disorders and Stroke Animal Care and Use Committee.
Swim stress and PTZ seizure threshold determination. Rats
were subjected to swim stress (10 min) in water at ambient temperature (22°C) in an acrylic cylindrical container (36 × 54 inches)
filled to 75% capacity. After swimming, the rats were gently dried
with towels and warmed by a heating lamp. After 15 min, the tail vein was cannulated with a 25 gauge butterfly needle and the animals were
infused with 20 mg/ml PTZ solution in 0.9% sterile saline at a rate of
0.5 ml/min using a Harvard Apparatus (Holliston, MA) syringe infusion
pump. The times between the start of infusion and the onset of
myoclonic forelimb clonus were recorded in seconds, and the threshold
convulsant dose in milligrams of PTZ per kilogram was calculated.
Estimation of THDOC. Mice were anesthetized with
CO2 gas, and 2 ml of carotid blood was collected
in heparinized tubes. The plasma was separated by centrifugation at
12,000 × g for 10 min and stored at 20°C in 10 ml
glass tubes containing 7.5% EDTA solution (68 µl). The concentration
of THDOC was quantified by liquid chromatography-mass spectrometry
using a Hewlett-Packard (Palo Alto, CA) liquid chromatograph
(analytical column: Genesis C18, 4 µm, 3 × 30 mm; Jones
Chromatography, Lakewood, CO) and a Micromass Quattro II mass
spectrometer (Reddy and Rogawski, 2000 ). Briefly, a 200 µl plasma
sample was added to a tube containing evaporated internal standard
(5 ,3 -pregnanolone). The steroid and internal standard were
extracted with 4 ml of hexane. Each sample was analyzed using the
atmospheric pressure chemical ionization technique under acidic
conditions. A standard curve was plotted using pure THDOC in methanol
mixed with 0.2 ml of blank plasma. Plasma samples that had levels of
THDOC below the detection limit (5 ng/ml) were spiked with 20 ng of
THDOC, which was subtracted from the final readings.
Chemoconvulsant seizure tests. DOC, DHDOC, and THDOC were
evaluated for their ability to protect against subcutaneous PTZ (85 mg/kg)-induced clonic seizures in mice (White et al., 1995 ). DOC was
also evaluated against seizures induced by the
GABAA receptor antagonists picrotoxin (3.2 mg/kg,
s.c.) and methyl-6,7-dimethoxy-4-ethyl- -carboline-3-carboxylate (DMCM; 7.5 mg/kg, s.c.). In brief, mice were injected intraperitoneally with the test compound and 15 min (DHDOC and THDOC) or 30 min (DOC)
later, or at the indicated intervals in the time course studies,
received an injection of PTZ, picrotoxin, or DMCM. Animals were then
observed for a 30 min period. Mice failing to show clonic spasms
lasting >5 sec were scored as protected.
Maximal electroshock seizure test. Thirty min after
intraperitoneal injection of DOC or 15 min after DHDOC and THDOC, mice were subjected to a 50 mA, 0.2 sec, 60 Hz electrical stimulus via
corneal electrodes (5-mm-diameter stainless steel balls) wetted with
normal saline. Animals failing to show tonic hindlimb extension were
scored as protected.
Amygdala kindling. Electrode implantation and stimulation
procedures for mouse amygdala kindling were as described previously (Rogawski et al., 2001 ). Briefly, mice were anesthetized by
intraperitoneal injection of a mixture of ketamine (100 mg/kg) and
xylazine (20 mg/kg). A twisted bipolar stainless steel wire electrode
(model MS303/1; Plastic One, Roanoke, VA) was stereotaxically implanted in the right amygdala complex (1.3 mm posterior and 3.0 mm lateral to
bregma and 4.6 mm below the dorsal surface of the skull) and anchored
with dental acrylic to three jeweler's screws placed in the skull. A
period of 7-10 d was allowed for recovery. The stimulation paradigm
consisted of 1-msec-duration, bipolar, square current pulses delivered
at 60 Hz for 1 sec. The afterdischarge threshold was determined by
stimulating at 5 min intervals beginning with an intensity of 75 µA
and increasing in steps of 50 µA until an afterdischarge of at least
5 sec was obtained. Stimulation on subsequent days used a stimulation
intensity of 125% of the threshold value. Seizure activity after each
stimulation was rated according to the criterion of Racine (1972) as
modified for the mouse: stage 0, no response or behavior arrest; stage
1, chewing or head nodding; stage 2, chewing and head nodding; stage 3, forelimb clonus; stage 4, bilateral forelimb clonus and rearing; stage 5, falling. The afterdischarge was recorded from the amygdala electrode
with a Grass CP511 AC electroencephalogram preamplifier (Astro-Med,
West Warwick, RI) and stored in digital form using Axotape 2.02 (Axon
Instruments, Foster City, CA). Kindling stimulation was delivered daily
until stage 5 seizures were elicited on 3 consecutive days. To examine
the ability of neurosteroids to suppress the expression of kindled
seizures, the kindled mice underwent a 5 d test protocol. On the
first day, they were verified to exhibit a stimulation-induced stage 5 seizure. They were then tested on days 2 and 4 after having received an
intraperitoneal injection of DOC or THDOC, respectively, 30 or 15 min
before stimulation. The animals received control stimulations on days 3 and 5. The two seizure scores after drug administration and the three
control seizure scores were averaged.
Motor toxicity test. Motor toxicity was evaluated using a
modification of the horizontal screen test (Coughenour et al., 1977 ) that determines an animal's ability to support its own body weight by
grasping a grid. Mice were placed on a horizontally oriented grid
(consisting of parallel 1.5-mm-diameter rods situated 1 cm apart), and
the grid was inverted. Animals that fell from the grid within 1 min
were scored as positive. Drug-free mice never fell from the grid.
Drugs. Stock solutions of steroids for injection were made
in 30% hydroxypropyl- -cyclodextrin ( -cyclodextrin) in water, and
additional dilutions were made using normal saline. By itself, -cyclodextrin at concentrations as high as 45% failed to affect PTZ-, maximal electroshock (MES)-, or kindling-induced seizures. Indomethacin was suspended in 0.1% methylcellulose solution, which per
se had no significant effect on PTZ-induced seizures. Drug solutions
were administered in a volume equaling 1% of the animal's body
weight. All drugs and chemicals were obtained from Sigma (St. Louis, MO).
Data analysis. Plasma THDOC concentration data are expressed
as the mean ± SEM. The significance of differences in the mean plasma concentrations and mean PTZ doses in the PTZ threshold test was
assessed by one-way ANOVA, followed by Dunnett's t test. ED50 values (the doses at which 50% of tested
animals were protected from seizures) and CD50 values (the
doses at which 50% of tested animals exhibited seizures) with 95%
confidence limits were determined by log-probit analysis using the
Litchfield and Wilcoxon procedure. In the construction of
dose-response curves, at least seven animals were tested at each dose.
The significance of differences between steroid dose-response curves
in the PTZ seizure test was assessed with the Litchfield and Wilcoxon
2 test. Kindling group data are
expressed as the mean ± SEM; the means were compared by the
Mann-Whitney U test. In all tests, the criterion for
statistical significance was p < 0.05. Statistical analyses were performed with PHARM/PCS version 4.2 (Microcomputer Specialists, Philadelphia, PA).
Cellular electrophysiology
The effect of neurosteroids on the GABAA
receptor Cl currents was evaluated in
cultured hippocampal neurons using whole-cell patch-clamp recording.
Cultures of hippocampal neurons were prepared from 19-d-old rat embryos
according to previously published methods (Segal, 1983 ; Donevan et al.,
1992 ). Hippocampi were dissected and triturated in modified minimal
essential medium with Earle's salt (Advanced Biotechnologies Inc.,
Columbia, MD) by repeated passage through a 10 ml pipette. The cell
suspension was then plated onto 35 mm polystyrene Petri dishes (Falcon
3001; Becton Dickinson Labware, Oxnard, CA) precoated with Matrigel at
a density corresponding to 1-1.5 hippocampus per dish. The plating
medium was supplemented with horse serum (Invitrogen, San Diego,
CA), fetal calf serum, and N3 (composed of
transferrin, putrescine, sodium selenite, triiodothyronine, insulin,
progesterone, and corticosterone). Cell cultures were placed in a
humidified atmosphere containing 10% CO2 at
37°C for 6-12 d before use. Fresh growth medium (without fetal calf
serum and N3) was added after 6 d in culture.
Electrophysiological recordings from neurons were performed in 35 mm
tissue culture dishes on the stage of an inverted phase-contrast microscope (Nikon Diaphot; Nikon, Tokyo, Japan) at room temperature (23-25°C). Before each experiment, the culture medium was replaced with filtered extracellular solution composed of 142 mM
NaCl, 8.1 mM CsCl, 1 mM
CaCl2, 6 mM
MgCl2, 10 mM HEPES, and 1 µM tetrodotoxin. The pH of the solution was adjusted to
7.3 using NaOH and to an osmolality of 325-330 mOsm/kg
H2O by adding sucrose. Patch electrodes (prepared
from 1.5 mm borosilicate glass capillaries with tip openings of ~2
µm and resistances of 3-8 M ) were filled with an intracellular
solution composed of (in mM): 153 CsCl, 1 MgCl2, 5 EGTA, and 10 HEPES. The pH of the
pipette solution was adjusted to 7.3 using CsOH and to an osmolality of
315-320 mOsm/kg H2O using sucrose. Medium-sized
neurons with two or three large processes were selected for study.
Recordings were made using an Axopatch 200A amplifier (Axon
Instruments, Burlingame, CA). Membrane currents were filtered at 1 kHz
( 3 dB, four-pole, low-pass Bessel filter), and the corresponding
voltages were acquired in digitized form using an on-line data
acquisition system (pClamp, Axon Instruments).
Drug solutions were applied using a microprocessor-controlled,
gravity-fed, multibarrel microperfusion system that allowed rapid (1 msec) switching between bathing medium and solutions of various test
substances alone or in combination. The perfusion pipette tip (diameter
~500 µM) was positioned 400-500 µm from the cell
surface. To examine modulation of GABA responses, a 10 sec
preapplication of either external buffer or steroid solution was
followed by a 10 sec application of GABA plus steroid, followed by a 10 sec wash with external buffer solution. To examine the direct actions
of the steroids, the steroids were continuously perfused for 20 sec.
Stock solutions of steroids were prepared in dimethylsulfoxide (DMSO)
and diluted to final concentration in extracellular solution (DMSO
concentration < 0.01-0.1%). To avoid artifacts caused by
effects of DMSO on the steroid-induced currents, all other solutions,
including GABA, also contained 0.05% DMSO. Applications of GABA and
steroids either alone or in combination were separated by a time
interval of at least 1 min to minimize desensitization.
Fractional potentiation produced by the steroids was calculated as
(IS IGABA)/IGABA,
where IGABA is the peak amplitude of the control GABA response and IS is
the peak amplitude of the response produced during coapplication
of GABA and the test steroid. The estimated concentration producing a
doubling in the amplitude of the GABA response
(EC100) was determined by interpolation from the
concentration-response data. Concentration-response data for direct
activation of Cl currents were
fitted using the Levenberg-Marquardt nonlinear least-squares method to
the logistic equation F = Fmax/{1 + (EC50/[S])nH},
where F represents the ratio of potentiated peak current and the peak current evoked by 10 µM GABA
(IGABA),
Fmax is the maximum ratio,
[S] is the steroid (or GABA) concentration, and
nH is an empirical parameter
describing the steepness of fit (equivalent to the Hill coefficient).
Data are presented as the mean ± SEM.
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RESULTS |
Swim stress elevation of PTZ seizure threshold and plasma THDOC
levels in rats: reversal by finasteride
Acute swim stress (10 min) resulted in a significant increase
(22%; p < 0.05) in the threshold for PTZ-induced
clonic seizures (Fig. 2). To examine
whether the effect of stress on seizure susceptibility is related to
neurosteroids, male rats were pretreated by intraperitoneal injection
90 min before the start of swimming (115 min before PTZ infusion) with
100 mg/kg finasteride, an irreversible inhibitor of types I and II
5 -reductase in rodents (Normington and Russell, 1992 ; Thigpen and
Russell, 1992 ; Azzolina et al., 1997 ), which has been shown previously
to inhibit neurosteroid synthesis (Kokate et al., 1999 ). Finasteride
did not affect the seizure threshold of nonstressed (naive) animals. It
did, however, completely prevent the stress-induced elevation of
seizure threshold. Moreover, in finasteride-treated stressed rats, the
seizure threshold was reduced significantly below the threshold in
nonstressed animals.

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Figure 2.
Acute swim stress elevates clonic seizure
threshold and plasma THDOC levels: inhibition by finasteride. Rats were
subjected to swimming for 10 min in water at ambient temperature, and
the seizure threshold was estimated 15 min later by intravenous
infusion of PTZ. Immediately after seizure occurrence, plasma samples
were collected for THDOC determination by liquid chromatography-mass
spectrometry. Pretreatment with finasteride (100 mg/kg, i.p.) 90 min
before swim stress significantly decreased the stress-induced increase
of THDOC level and seizure threshold. Data represent mean ± SEM
(n = 8 per group). *p < 0.05 versus naive controls (Dunnett's t test); others are
not significantly different from naive controls.
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Swim stress was associated with an increase in THDOC plasma levels at
the time of seizure testing (Fig. 2). In naive rats, THDOC plasma
levels were only slightly and nonsignificantly decreased by
pretreatment with finasteride. However, finasteride completely prevented the stress-induced increase in plasma THDOC
(p < 0.01). The ability of finasteride to
prevent the stress-induced increase in seizure threshold and rise in
THDOC suggested that acute stress modulates seizure susceptibility by
enhancing 5 -pregnane-derived neurosteroids such as THDOC. Because
THDOC is derived from DOC, these results raised the possibility that
the anticonvulsant effects of acute stress could be mediated by
increased DOC synthesis or availability.
DOC-induced elevation of PTZ seizure threshold in rats: correlation
with plasma THDOC levels
To evaluate the possibility that the anticonvulsant effects of
swim stress are related to enhanced DOC synthesis and conversion to
THDOC, we sought to confirm that DOC itself has anticonvulsant activity
that is correlated with THDOC levels. Intraperitoneal administration of
DOC (1.9-30 mg/kg) in rats caused a dose-dependent elevation of the
PTZ seizure threshold (Fig. 3). There was
a corresponding dose-dependent increase in plasma THDOC levels. The
lowest DOC dose tested (1.9 mg/kg) caused a 12% elevation in seizure
threshold (p < 0.05) and was associated with an
increase in mean plasma THDOC from 3.8 to 27 ng/ml
(p < 0.001).

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Figure 3.
Systemic DOC administration elevates clonic
seizure threshold and plasma THDOC levels. Rats were injected
intraperitoneally with vehicle (control) or various doses of DOC.
Thirty minutes later, the seizure threshold was estimated by
intravenous infusion of PTZ. Immediately after seizure occurrence,
plasma samples were collected for THDOC determination by liquid
chromatography-mass spectrometry. Data represent mean ± SEM
(n = 7-8 per group). *p < 0.05 versus control; **p < 0.01 versus control
(Dunnett's t test). Plasma THDOC values are all
significantly different from control (p < 0.001).
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Anticonvulsant actions of DOC in mice
Additional anticonvulsant testing was performed using an
all-or-none mouse model with an ED97 dose of PTZ
(85 mg/kg, s.c.). This model provides greater reproducibility and
allows quantification of anticonvulsant ED50
values but is less sensitive to the anticonvulsant effects of
neurosteroids. As in the rat PTZ threshold model, acute administration
of DOC protected male mice against PTZ-induced clonic seizures in a
dose-dependent manner (Fig. 4); the
ED50 value determined by log-probit analysis is
presented in Table 1. THDOC plasma levels
were determined in a separate group of animals at the same time as the
initiation of the seizure testing. For increasing doses of DOC, there
was a corresponding dose-dependent increase in plasma THDOC levels that
was highly correlated with the dose-response relationship for seizure
protection in the PTZ test (r = 0.91). The interpolated
plasma THDOC level at the ED50 dose of DOC is 595 ng/ml.

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Figure 4.
Protective activity of DOC in the PTZ seizure test
correlates with plasma THDOC levels. DOC (25-200 mg/kg, i.p.) was
administered to male mice 30 min before injection of PTZ (85 mg/kg,
s.c.) or plasma collection. Each point in the seizure test curve
represents eight mice; each point in the plasma THDOC curve represents
the mean ± SEM of THDOC determinations in a separate group of six
mice. There is a high correlation (r = 0.91;
p < 0.001) between the dose-response relationship
for seizure protection and the mean plasma THDOC levels.
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Activity of DOC in other chemoconvulsant models, MES test, and
screen test
In addition to characterizing its actions in the PTZ seizure test,
we examined DOC for protective activity against seizures induced by
various other chemoconvulsants in mice. DOC was also examined for
activity in the MES test and for motor toxicity in the screen test. The
results of these studies are summarized in Table 1. DOC protected in a
dose-dependent manner against seizures induced by picrotoxin and DMCM.
At higher doses, it was protective in the MES test. At doses as high as
300 mg/kg, it did not protect against seizures induced by strychnine
(1.3 mg/kg, s.c.), kainic acid (32 mg/kg, s.c.), 4-aminopyridine (13.3 mg/kg, s.c.), and NMDA (257 mg/kg, s.c.). At doses comparable with
those that were effective in the PTZ test, DOC induced motor impairment
as detected by the screen test.
Effects of finasteride and indomethacin on anticonvulsant activity
of DOC in PTZ test
If the anticonvulsant effects of DOC are caused by its conversion
to THDOC, then inhibitors of the two reduction steps through which
THDOC is synthesized from DOC should interfere with its protective
activity. We used finasteride as in the swim stress experiments to
block the initial 5 -reductase step, and we also studied
indomethacin, which has been reported to act as a competitive inhibitor
of 3 -hydroxysteroid oxidoreductase (Penning et al., 1985 ).
Finasteride (50 mg/kg, i.p.) caused an 84% reduction in the conversion
of DOC to THDOC as assessed by plasma THDOC determinations 30 min after
a 150 mg/kg intraperitoneal injection of DOC administered 60 min
after finasteride (control THDOC, 1081 ± 91 ng/ml; finasteride, 176 ± 11 ng/ml).
As illustrated in Figure 5A,
pretreatment with finasteride (10 mg/kg, i.p.) caused a marked
rightward shift in the dose-response relationship for DOC protection
against PTZ seizures. However, the highest DOC dose tested (300 mg/kg)
almost completely overcame the reversal. Finasteride significantly
increased the anticonvulsant ED50 values of DOC
derived from these data from a control value of 84 mg/kg [95%
confidence limits (CL), 35-145 mg/kg] to 180 mg/kg (95% CL,
139-233 mg/kg). Similarly, indomethacin also inhibited the
antiseizure activity of DOC [ED50 after
indomethacin treatment, 129 mg/kg (95% CL, 107-154 mg/kg)]; this
inhibitory action could also be completely overcome at high DOC doses.
Figure 5B shows the dose-response relationships for
finasteride and indomethacin inhibition of seizure protection by a 2×
ED50 (168 mg/kg) dose of DOC. The
ED50 value for finasteride inhibition of the
antiseizure activity of DOC was 7.2 mg/kg (95% CL, 5-30 mg/kg).
Similarly, high doses of indomethacin significantly but only partially
(39% at 300 mg/kg) inhibited the antiseizure activity of these high doses of DOC (Fig. 5B). The expected inhibition determined
by interpolation for 100 mg/kg indomethicin from the experiment shown in Figure 5A is 11%, which compares favorably with the
expected 10% inhibition by the same dose in the experiment shown in
Figure 5B.

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Figure 5.
Finasteride and indomethacin inhibit the
protective activity of DOC in the PTZ seizure test. A,
Dose-response relationship for DOC (50-300 mg/kg, i.p.) protection
against PTZ seizures is shifted to the right by pretreatment with
finasteride (10 mg/kg, i.p.) or indomethacin (100 mg/kg, i.p.).
B, Dose-response relationship for finasteride (1-50
mg/kg, i.p.) or indomethacin (10-300 mg/kg, i.p.) inhibition of the
anticonvulsant activity of DOC (168 mg/kg) in the PTZ test.
A and B, Finasteride or indomethacin was
administered 60 or 30 min, respectively, before the DOC injection. Each
point represents data from eight mice.
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We have shown previously that finasteride is neither proconvulsant nor
has any nonspecific anticonvulsant actions in the PTZ test in mice
(Kokate et al., 1999 ). To ascertain whether indomethacin affects the
PTZ seizure threshold, we compared the dose-response relationships for
PTZ (30-85 mg/kg) 30 min after animals were injected with 100 mg/kg
indomethacin or vehicle. The CD50 values for the vehicle control [48 mg/kg (95% CL, 42-54 mg/kg)] and
indomethacin pretreatment groups [46 mg/kg (95% CL, 41-52 mg/kg)]
did not differ significantly, indicating that indomethacin did not
affect the PTZ seizure test.
These data provide strong evidence that the antiseizure activity of DOC
in the PTZ model is mediated by its A-ring reduced metabolites.
Moreover, the dramatic activity of finasteride in conjunction with the
limited efficacy of indomethacin suggested that DHDOC as well as THDOC
could participate in the anticonvulsant activity of DOC.
Anticonvulsant activity of DHDOC: comparison with DOC
and THDOC
To investigate the possibility that the intermediate DHDOC as well
as THDOC contributes to the anticonvulsant activity of DOC, we
administered the intermediate directly. As predicted, DHDOC exhibited a
dose-dependent protective activity in the mouse PTZ test and was only
slightly less potent than THDOC (Fig.
6A). At higher doses,
both DHDOC and THDOC also protected in a dose-dependent manner against
MES-induced seizures and impaired motor function as assessed with the
screen test (ED50 values in Table 1).

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Figure 6.
Anticonvulsant activity of DHDOC and THDOC in the
PTZ seizure test: effects of finasteride (Finast.) and
indomethacin (Indomet.). A,
Dose-response relationships for protection by DOC, DHDOC, and THDOC in
the PTZ seizure test. B, Time courses for protection
against PTZ-induced seizures by DOC (168 mg/kg, i.p.), DHDOC (52 mg/kg,
i.p.), and THDOC (38 mg/kg, i.p.) administered at time 0. The
points at time 0 represent the simultaneous
administration of PTZ and a neurosteroid. The lines
represent arbitrary fits to the data points. C,
Dose-response relationship for DHDOC protection against PTZ seizures
is shifted to the right by indomethacin (100 mg/kg, i.p.) pretreatment
but not by finasteride (10 mg/kg, i.p.) pretreatment. D,
Lack of effect of finasteride and indomethacin pretreatment on the
dose-response relationship for THDOC protection against PTZ seizures.
Finasteride or indomethacin was administered 60 or 30 min,
respectively, before the DHDOC or THDOC injections. Each point
represents data from eight mice.
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Time courses for seizure protection
The time courses for seizure protection after a 2×
ED50 dose of DOC, DHDOC, and THDOC are shown in
Figure 6B. DOC exhibited a slow onset to peak effect
(30 min) and a sustained duration of action (up to 180 min). In
contrast, for DHDOC and THDOC, protection was maximal at 15 min and
diminished during the 60 min period after the injection. These results
are compatible with the possibility that DOC is activated by conversion
to DHDOC and THDOC.
Effects of finasteride and indomethacin on anticonvulsant activity
of DHDOC and THDOC
The anticonvulsant activity of DHDOC could be either attributable
to its own direct action or mediated via conversion to THDOC. If DHDOC
is activated by conversion to THDOC, its anticonvulsant activity should
be sensitive to indomethacin. As shown in Figure 6C,
indomethacin (100 mg/kg), but not finasteride (10 mg/kg), significantly
reduced the antiseizure activity of DHDOC [control ED50, 25.5 mg/kg (95% CL, 23-53 mg/kg),
indomethacin treatment, 48 mg/kg (95% CL, 34-68 mg/kg);
p < 0.05] (Fig. 6C). Neither finasteride nor indomethacin affected THDOC protection against PTZ-induced seizures
(Fig. 6D).
Effects of pharmacological antagonists on anticonvulsant activity
of DOC in MES test
In contrast to its effects in the PTZ test, finasteride (up to 200 mg/kg) did not block the protective effects of high doses of DOC (214 mg/kg) on tonic hindlimb extension in the MES seizure test (only one of
nine mice showed tonic hindlimb extension with 200 mg/kg finasteride
pretreatment). In addition, mifepristone (3-30 mg/kg, s.c.), a
progesterone receptor antagonist, and spironolactone (5-30 mg/kg,
s.c.), a mineralocorticoid receptor antagonist, did not inhibit the
antiseizure activity of DOC (168 mg/kg) against PTZ-induced seizures,
indicating that it does not act through classic steroid nuclear hormone
receptors (data not shown).
Activity of DOC in adrenalectomized mice
To exclude the possibility that the anticonvulsant activity of DOC
is related to adrenal conversion to neurosteroids or to the
modification of adrenal steroid synthesis, we examined its activity in
adrenalectomized mice. The ED50 for DOC
protection against PTZ-induced seizures was 67 mg/kg (95% CL, 51-90
mg/kg), which is not significantly different from the value in naive
controls (Table 1), indicating that adrenal cortical 5 -reductase
(Yokoi et al., 1998 ) is not required for the anticonvulsant activity of
DOC. In adrenalectomized mice, finasteride (30 mg/kg) reversed the
protective effect of a 2× ED50 dose of DOC (134 mg/kg) in five of six animals. This dose of DOC protected six of six
control animals. These results indicate that extra-adrenal conversion of DOC to anticonvulsant neurosteroids requires 5 -reductase.
Antiseizure activity of DOC and THDOC in kindling model
of epilepsy
DOC and THDOC were also examined for protective activity against
fully kindled seizures in the mouse amygdala-kindling model of
epilepsy. Mice with a bipolar stimulating electrode implanted unilaterally into the right amygdala were stimulated once daily at
125% of their afterdischarge threshold until they exhibited stage 5 kindled seizures on 3 successive days (Rogawski et al., 2001 ). There
was a progressive increase in seizure stage, with all animals achieving
stage 5 after 17 stimulations. The mean afterdischarge duration did not
vary significantly during the course of stimulation in saline-treated
animals. Administration of DOC (50-100 mg/kg, i.p.) 30 min before
electrical stimulation in fully kindled animals caused a dose-dependent
suppression of the behavioral seizure scores (Fig.
7A) but did not affect the afterdischarge duration (data not shown). Pretreatment with finasteride (10 and 30 mg/kg, i.p.) produced a dose-dependent reversal of the
protective effect of 100 mg/kg DOC. Neither the seizure score nor the
afterdischarge duration was significantly affected by finasteride
alone. Similarly, administration of THDOC (3-20 mg/kg, i.p.) 15 min
before stimulation also caused a dose-dependent reduction in the
seizure score in fully kindled animals (Fig. 7B). However, finasteride (10 and 30 mg/kg) failed to produce a significant reversal
of the inhibition of kindled seizures produced by 20 mg/kg THDOC. These
results indicate that the anticonvulsant activity of DOC against
kindled seizures is mediated via its 5 -reduced metabolites.

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Figure 7.
Inhibition of fully kindled seizures by DOC and
THDOC: reversal of DOC but not THDOC by finasteride. A,
Mice that exhibited stage 5 seizures on 3 consecutive days received an
intraperitoneal injection of vehicle or DOC (50-100 mg/kg) 30 min
before stimulation on days 1 and 3 of stimulation. Some animals
received finasteride (10 or 30 mg/kg) 1 hr before DOC.
B, Similar experiment to A except that
THDOC (3, 10, or 20 mg/kg 15 min before stimulation) was substituted
for DOC. Each bar represents the mean ± SEM of
data from six to eight animals. *p < 0.05, **p < 0.01 versus vehicle (Veh);
#p < 0.05 versus DOC (100 mg/kg) alone
group (Mann-Whitney U test).
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Effects of DHDOC and THDOC on GABAA
receptor function
The ability of DHDOC and THDOC to modulate
GABAA receptor function was investigated in
whole-cell voltage-clamp recordings of GABAA
receptor Cl currents in cultured
hippocampal neurons (Fig. 8). Perfusion with 10 µM GABA evoked inward currents that were blocked
by 100 µM bicuculline methiodide and 100 µM
picrotoxin, indicating that they are mediated by
GABAA receptors (Fig.
9B). As demonstrated previously (Kokate et al., 1994 ), preapplication (10 sec) and then
coapplication of THDOC (10-1000 nM) with 10 µM GABA resulted in enhancement of the current
response in comparison with the magnitude of the response obtained with
GABA alone. Sample currents obtained with 10 µM
GABA alone or in combination with THDOC are illustrated in Figure
8A. As shown in Figure 8B, there
was a concentration-dependent increase in the degree of potentiation,
with concentrations as low as 10 nM producing a
significant increase. The concentration that produced a doubling of the
control GABA current (EC100) estimated by
interpolation was 150 nM. Similarly, DHDOC
(10-1000 nM) also produced a
concentration-dependent enhancement of GABA-activated Cl currents that was evident at
concentrations as low as 30 nM but was
quantitatively smaller than the potentiation produced by THDOC; the
interpolated EC100 was ~500
nM.

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Figure 8.
Modulatory and direct actions of THDOC and DHDOC
on GABAA receptor Cl currents in
cultured hippocampal neurons. A, Sample
traces showing Cl currents evoked
during perfusion with 10 µM GABA alone and coapplication
of GABA and 1 µM THDOC or 1 µM DHDOC. The
steroids were preapplied for 10 sec before the onset of the GABA
coapplication. Dotted lines indicate baseline current. Time
scale applies to both traces. B,
Concentration-response curves for THDOC and DHDOC derived from
experiments similar to those shown in A. Peak amplitude
values during coapplication of GABA and neurosteroid were compared with
the amplitude of 10 µM GABA responses in the same cells
(see Materials and Methods). Each point represents the
mean ± SEM of fractional increase values from five to eight
cells. The curves show arbitrary logistic fits to the
mean values; parameters could not be derived because plateau responses
were not achieved. Approximate EC100 values determined by
interpolation for THDOC and DHDOC are 150 and 500 nM,
respectively. C, Inward currents evoked by 10 µM GABA and 1 and 100 µM DHDOC alone. The
thick trace in the middle panel shows the
trace expanded 10-fold. D, Concentration dependence of
peak GABA-activated Cl current expressed as a
fraction of the current evoked by 100 µM GABA.
EC50, 19.6 µM;
nH, 1.1; mean current for 100 µM GABA, 6.1 ± 1.1 nA. E,
Concentration-response curves for direct activation of inward current
by DHDOC or THDOC alone. Currents are expressed as a fraction of the
peak current evoked by 10 µM GABA in the same cell.
Curves are fitted as described in Materials and Methods.
EC50 and Fmax values for THDOC
and DHDOC are 19.0 ± 2.3 µM and 0.58 ± 0.03 (nH = 2.1), and 30.2 ± 6.0 µM and 0.41 ± 0.06 (nH = 2.9), respectively.
D and E, Each point represents the
mean ± SEM of data from 5 to 12 cells. Holding potential in all
experiments, 60 mV.
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Figure 9.
Currents evoked by THDOC are blocked by the
GABAA receptor antagonists picrotoxin
(PTX) and bicuculline (BIC).
A, Representative current traces showing
block of currents activated by 30 µM THDOC in two
separate cells by 100 µM PTX (left) and
100 µM BIC (right). B,
Fractional block of currents evoked by 30 µM THDOC
(left) and 10 µM GABA
(right) by PTX and BIC in experiments similar to those
shown in A. Peak current amplitudes in the presence of
PTX and BIC are normalized to the peak control current amplitudes in
the absence of antagonist. Each bar represents the
mean ± SEM of data from three to five cells. Mean amplitudes of
THDOC- and GABA-evoked currents are 1030 ± 170 pA
(n = 5) and 1920 ± 380 pA
(n = 5), respectively. Holding potential, 60
mV.
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At high concentrations, neurosteroids, in the absence of GABA, directly
activate GABAA receptor
Cl currents (Kokate et al., 1994 ). We
confirmed this effect for THDOC and observed a similar direct effect of
DHDOC (Fig. 8C,E). As illustrated in Figure 8C,
perfusion of hippocampal neurons with 1 or 100 µM DHDOC (in the absence of GABA) resulted in
activation of inward current responses that were similar to the
response evoked by GABA. The maximum amplitudes of the THDOC or
DHDOC responses were 58 and 41% of the 10 µM
GABA response amplitude, which was 32% of the maximal GABA response
amplitude (Fig. 8D). Thus, even the maximal
steroid-evoked currents were only a fraction (<20%) of the maximal
GABA-activated Cl current. Like
GABA-evoked responses, the currents evoked directly by THDOC and DHDOC
were blocked by coapplication of picrotoxin and bicuculline methiodide,
as illustrated for THDOC in Figure 9, indicating that they are
attributable to activation of GABAA receptors.
 |
DISCUSSION |
Swim stress elevation in seizure threshold is mediated
by neurosteroids
Our observation that swim stress increases the threshold for
clonic seizures in rats induced by intravenous PTZ is consistent with
several previous studies demonstrating that acute swim stress is
associated with anticonvulsant effects against seizures induced by PTZ
and other GABAA receptor antagonists (Soubrie et
al., 1980 ; Abel and Berman, 1993 ; Peri i et al., 2000 ,
2001 ). At the time of seizure protection, swim stress was associated
with a 2.9-fold elevation in plasma THDOC levels. Similar increases in
plasma THDOC levels have been observed previously in response to swim stress and other stressors, including footshock (Purdy et al., 1991 ;
Barbaccia et al., 1996 ). Moreover, we observed that both the elevation
in seizure threshold and the rise in THDOC were eliminated by
pretreatment with finasteride, consistent with the possibility that the
anticonvulsant effect is mediated by 5 -reduced neurosteroids. [Our
results differ from those of Peri i et al. (2000) ,
possibly because of differences in the seizure models.] Finasteride
did not affect seizure threshold or THDOC levels in nonstressed
animals, indicating that THDOC turnover under basal conditions is
substantially longer than the 90 min pretreatment interval and that the
stress-induced increase in THDOC is related to de novo
synthesis. In rodents, finasteride blocks the type I 5 -reductase
isoenzyme, which is the predominant form in the brain, as well as the
type II form of the prostate and gonads (Russell and Wilson, 1994 ;
Mensah-Nyagan et al., 1999 ; Poletti et al., 1999 ). Consequently, the
neurosteroids responsible for stress-induced seizure protection could
be synthesized in peripheral tissues and then transported by the
circulation to the brain, or they could be produced locally in the
brain. In fact, because of local biosynthesis, brain THDOC levels may
be substantially higher than plasma levels after stressful events
(Purdy et al., 1991 ). Because the synthesis of DOC, the precursor of
THDOC, is increased by stress (Barbaccia et al., 1996 ) and THDOC is
well recognized to have anticonvulsant activity (Kokate et al., 1994 ), THDOC is a prime candidate for the neurosteroid responsible for the
swim stress effects on seizures. In this regard, it is noteworthy that
3 -hydroxysteroid oxidoreductase, the enzyme responsible for the
final step in the synthesis of THDOC, is also present in the brain (Li
et al., 1997 ; Stoffel-Wagner et al., 2000 ). In addition to blocking
THDOC biosynthesis, finasteride also inhibits the conversion of
progesterone to allopregnanolone (Azzolina et al., 1997 ). It is
therefore possible that allopregnanolone or other anticonvulsant
5 -reduced neurosteroids might also have contributed to the
antiseizure effects of swim stress. In fact, there is evidence that
levels of allopregnanolone, like those of THDOC, are increased during
stress (Purdy et al., 1991 ; Barbaccia et al., 1996 ). However,
glucocorticoids, which reach higher levels than DOC during stress
(Kater et al., 1989 ), are not likely to be involved in the protective
effects of swim stress on seizures, because they either decrease or do
not affect seizure thresholds in animals (Heuser and Eidelberg, 1961 ;
Conforti and Feldman, 1975 ; Roberts and Keith, 1994 ;
Peri i et al., 2000 ). We unexpectedly observed that the
seizure threshold of finasteride-treated stressed rats was
significantly reduced below the baseline control value. This suggests
the existence of a proconvulsant factor released during stress whose
activity is masked by the concomitant release of anticonvulsant neurosteroids.
GABAA receptor-modulating neurosteroids are responsible
for the antiseizure activity of DOC
To obtain support for the hypothesis that DOC contributes to
stress-related reductions in seizure susceptibility, we examined DOC as
an anticonvulsant. We confirmed early studies showing that DOC protects
against PTZ-induced seizures (Selye, 1942 ; Craig, 1966 ) and extended
this work by demonstrating an effect of the steroid in several other
chemoconvulsant models and against fully kindled seizures. We found
that seizure protection in the rat PTZ threshold test occurred with low
doses of DOC that were associated with levels of plasma THDOC
comparable with those in the stressed rats. However, the magnitude of
the seizure threshold elevation after swim stress was greater than that
occurring with the lowest dose of DOC (22% vs 12%), although the
elevation in plasma THDOC was less after stress than with this dose of
DOC (threefold vs sevenfold). This supports the possibility that
additional factors (such as allopregnanolone) may contribute to the
anticonvulsant activity of swim stress.
In the mouse all-or-none PTZ test, we found that the anticonvulsant
activity of DOC was well correlated with plasma THDOC levels, although
the absolute concentrations required for seizure protection were
substantially greater than in the rat PTZ threshold model. Finasteride
completely blocked the antiseizure activity of DOC and markedly blunted
the increase in plasma THDOC obtained after administration of the
precursor. We also found that indomethacin, an inhibitor of
3 -hydroxysteroid oxidoreductase, significantly reduced but did not
completely block the anticonvulsant activity of DOC. Together, these
results indicate that DOC itself is not anticonvulsant and must be
activated by A-ring reduction. The relatively delayed onset and more
prolonged duration of seizure protection conferred by DOC compared with
DHDOC and THDOC (Fig. 6B) is compatible with the
possibility that DOC is an inactive precursor that must be
metabolically activated. Nevertheless, it is apparent that DOC is
rapidly converted to its active metabolites, inasmuch as some seizure
protection was apparent even at times as brief as 7 min after its
parenteral administration.
The observation that indomethacin is not fully effective at eliminating
the anticonvulsant activity of DOC is consistent with the possibility
that DHDOC could contribute to the antiseizure activity. The spectrum
of activity exhibited by DOC in animal seizure models was similar to
that of anticonvulsants that modulate GABAA
receptors, providing additional support for the concept that the
protection is ultimately mediated through GABAA
receptors. Thus, like GABAA receptor modulators
(Rogawski and Porter, 1990 ), DOC exhibited protective activity against
seizures induced by the GABAA receptor
antagonists PTZ, picrotoxin, and DMCM but did not confer protection
against seizures induced by the glutamate receptor agonists NMDA and
kainate and the glycine receptor antagonist strychnine. In addition,
DOC was highly active against fully kindled seizures, as are drugs that
facilitate GABAergic neurotransmission (Albertson et al., 1980 ;
Morimoto et al., 1993 , 1997 ). Neuroactive steroids have been reported
to protect against corneal and PTZ-kindled seizures (Carter et al.,
1997 ; Gasior et al., 2000 ). We now extend these observations by showing
that THDOC and also DOC are protective against seizures in the
amygdala-kindling model. There are several early reports that DOC is
effective against electroshock seizures (Woodbury and Davenport, 1949 ;
Craig, 1966 ; Ferngren, 1969 ). We also found that high doses of DOC are
protective in the MES test, as we reported previously for high doses of
progesterone and its A-ring reduced metabolite allopregnanolone (Kokate
et al., 1999 ). However, the anticonvulsant activity of DOC in the MES
test, like that of progesterone in our previous study, was unaffected
by finasteride, indicating that it occurs through mechanisms unrelated to conversion to GABAA receptor-modulating neurosteroids.
Identity of the neurosteroids that mediate the anticonvulsant
activity of DOC
Finasteride and indomethacin inhibited the anticonvulsant activity
of DOC without themselves affecting seizure threshold (Kokate et al.,
1999 ; Reddy and Rogawski, 2000 ), providing strong evidence that A-ring
reduced neurosteroid metabolites contribute to the anticonvulsant
activity of the adrenal steroid. Several considerations indicate that
DHDOC and THDOC represent these activated metabolites. The observation
that finasteride can completely block the anticonvulsant activity of
DOC indicates that the 5 -reduced isomers of DHDOC and THDOC, which
could be produced by 3-ketosteroid 5 -reductase in the liver
(Charbonneau and The, 2001 ) and brain (Kawahara et al., 1975 ), do not
play a role in the anticonvulsant activity, although the 5 -isomers
have anticonvulsant activity that is only modestly less potent than
their 5 -congeners (Kokate et al., 1994 ). However, indomethacin did
not fully block the anticonvulsant activity of DOC, suggesting that the
intermediate DHDOC may have anticonvulsant activity itself.
Alternatively, metabolites of DHDOC other than THDOC could have
anticonvulsant activity. In this regard, it is noteworthy that
3 -reduced analogs have low GABAA
receptor modulatory activity and are correspondingly weak
anticonvulsants (Kokate et al., 1994 ). Moreover, steroid 3 -reducing
activity has not been reported. Therefore, 3 -reduced DHDOC
metabolites are unlikely to contribute to the anticonvulsant activity
of DOC. The conclusion that DHDOC is an active DOC metabolite relies on
the effectiveness of indomethacin as an inhibitor of
3 -hydroxysteroid oxidoreductase. Indomethacin is a highly potent and
effective inhibitor of the enzyme in vitro that is active
in vivo even at doses that are substantially lower than
those required to affect the anticonvulsant activity of DOC (Penning
and Talalay, 1983 ; Penning et al., 1985 ; Smithgall and Penning, 1985 ;
Gallo and Smith, 1993 ; Beyer et al., 1999 ). The fact that DHDOC can
potentiate GABAA receptor responses, albeit with
less potency than THDOC, suggests that DHDOC could contribute to the
anticonvulsant activity of DOC, particularly in the presence of
3 -hydroxysteroid oxidoreductase inhibition, when DHDOC levels would
be expected to become significant.
Antiseizure activity of DOC occurs via neurosteroid potentiation of
GABAA receptors
Our electrophysiological studies confirm that THDOC acts as a
positive modulator of GABAA receptors (Majewska
et al., 1986 ; Harrison et al., 1987 ; Lambert et al., 1990 ; Purdy et
al., 1990 ; Wetzel et al., 1999 ), and we now show that the intermediate
DHDOC acts in a similar manner. Both of the steroids directly activate GABAA receptor Cl
currents and potentiate the action of GABA, as does the
progesterone-derived neurosteroid allopregnanolone (Kokate et al.,
1994 ; Lambert et al., 1995 ; Park-Chung et al., 1999 ). The mean plasma
concentration of THDOC determined after swim stress (6.2 ng/ml = 19 nM) is within the range of concentrations found to
enhance GABA-activated Cl currents.
Comparable concentrations of THDOC (27 ng/ml) were associated with a
statistically significant elevation in the rat PTZ seizure threshold
(Fig. 3). However, these concentrations do not appear to be adequate
for seizure protection in the less sensitive mouse PTZ test (Fig. 4).
In any case, plasma concentrations might not fully reflect brain levels
because of local synthesis. The direct agonist actions of THDOC and
DHDOC were antagonized by bicuculline and picrotoxin to an extent
similar to GABA, demonstrating that the currents obtained were caused
by activation of GABAA receptors. The micromolar
concentrations at which these direct effects occur were not achieved in
the stress paradigm used in this study but were attained with exogenous
administration of doses of DOC active in the PTZ test (plasma
concentration after ED50 DOC dose, 1.8 µM).
Implications
It has been recognized for centuries that emotional factors can
affect seizure control (Minter, 1979 ). Although most systematic studies
have observed that high stress levels and stressful events are
associated with more frequent epileptiform electroencephalographic abnormalities and seizures (Temkin and Davis, 1984 ; Frucht et al.,
2000 ), there are situations in which stress or alerting has been
demonstrated to reduce epileptiform electrographic abnormalities (Minter, 1979 ). Nevertheless, it is generally accepted that stress triggers seizures. How can the present observations be reconciled with
this view? There are undoubtedly many neural and endocrine pathways
through which stress can alter brain function and thereby affect
seizure susceptibility. The likelihood of seizures represents a balance
between these pathways, some of which promote seizures (e.g.,
glucocorticoids, CRF, hypercarbia associated with hyperventilation) and
others (e.g., neurosteroids) that protect against seizures. Stress-induced seizures would therefore occur when the balance is
shifted to favor the proconvulsant factors, outweighing the anticonvulsant action of endogenous GABAA
receptor-modulating neurosteroids. We have shown previously that
withdrawal from allopregnanolone dramatically enhances seizure
susceptibility (Reddy and Rogawski, 2000 , 2001 ). Similarly, withdrawal
of adrenal-derived neurosteroids in association with variations in the
level of stress during a stressful episode could be another factor that
predisposes to stress-induced seizures.
 |
FOOTNOTES |
Received Oct. 30, 2001; revised Jan. 25, 2002; accepted Jan. 28, 2002.
The expert assistance of Nassim Tabatabai, Karen Wayns, and Dr.
Shun-ichi Yamaguchi is gratefully acknowledged. We thank Dr. Gregory L. Holmes for bringing to our attention early work on the anticonvulsant
activity of DOC.
Correspondence should be addressed to Dr. Michael A. Rogawski at the
above address. E-mail: michael.rogawski{at}nih.gov.
D. S. Reddy's present address: Department of Anatomy, Physiological
Sciences, and Radiology, North Carolina State University College of
Veterinary Medicine, Raleigh, NC 27606.
 |
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