Audiogenic seizure as a model of sudden death in epilepsy: A comparative study between four inbred mouse strains from early life to adulthood

B Martin, G Dieuset, JL Pawluski, N Costet… - …, 2020 - Wiley Online Library
B Martin, G Dieuset, JL Pawluski, N Costet, A Biraben
Epilepsia, 2020Wiley Online Library
Objective Mouse models of sudden unexpected death in epileptic patients (SUDEP) using
audiogenic seizures (AGS) are valuable because death can occur following a sound‐
induced seizure in the absence of any pharmacologic or electric component. However, only
a few strains of mice are AGS prone, and the vast majority of studies involve DBA/2 or DBA/1
inbred strains. With the goal of characterizing the variation of AGS susceptibility with age,
and of offering a larger panel of mice available for AGS studies, we performed a comparative …
Objective
Mouse models of sudden unexpected death in epileptic patients (SUDEP) using audiogenic seizures (AGS) are valuable because death can occur following a sound‐induced seizure in the absence of any pharmacologic or electric component. However, only a few strains of mice are AGS prone, and the vast majority of studies involve DBA/2 or DBA/1 inbred strains. With the goal of characterizing the variation of AGS susceptibility with age, and of offering a larger panel of mice available for AGS studies, we performed a comparative study of the variability in AGS responses.
Methods
The variation of AGS with age was determined in two classically used inbred strains of mice, DBA/2 and DBA/1, and two additional strains, BALB/c and 129/SvTer. As AGS‐stimulated tonic seizures can be lethal or nonlethal, even in the same inbred strain, in a second experiment, we addressed whether there is an innate capacity to reproduce the same response after a tonic AGS, referred to as “determinism,” in the DBA/2J, DBA/1J, and 129/SvTer mouse strains.
Results
Results show that the 129/SvTer mouse is a more versatile model of SUDEP due to its wider age range of susceptibility compared to the DBA/2J and DBA/1J mouse strains. In addition, we show that determinism is not consistently evident in DBA/2J and 129/SvTer strains after AGS. Hence, one cannot be certain that a lethal AGS will always be lethal in successive testing after resuscitation and vice versa in these two mouse strains.
Significance
These studies highlight the phenotypic variability of AGS in different mouse strains, show the value of an additional mouse strain, 129/SvTer, for studies using AGS, and thus provide valuable information for future studies of AGS and SUDEP.
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