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A hyperthermic seizure unleashes a surge of spreading depolarizations in Scn1a-deficient mice
Isamu Aiba, … , Yao Ning, Jeffrey L. Noebels
Isamu Aiba, … , Yao Ning, Jeffrey L. Noebels
Published August 8, 2023
Citation Information: JCI Insight. 2023;8(15):e170399. https://doi.org/10.1172/jci.insight.170399.
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Research Article Neuroscience

A hyperthermic seizure unleashes a surge of spreading depolarizations in Scn1a-deficient mice

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Abstract

Spreading depolarization (SD) is a massive wave of cellular depolarization that slowly migrates across the brain gray matter. Cortical SD is frequently generated following brain injury, while less is understood about its potential contribution to genetic disorders of hyperexcitability, such as SCN1A-deficient epilepsy, in which febrile seizure often contributes to disease initiation. Here we report that spontaneous SD waves are predominant EEG abnormalities in the Scn1a-deficient mouse (Scn1a+/R1407X) and undergo sustained intensification following a single hyperthermic seizure. Chronic DC-band EEG recording detected spontaneous SDs, seizures, and seizure-SD complexes in Scn1a+/R1407X mice but not WT littermates. The SD events were infrequent, while a single hyperthermia-induced seizure robustly increased SD frequency over 4-fold during the initial postictal week. This prolonged neurological aftermath could be suppressed by memantine administration. Video, electromyogram, and EEG spectral analysis revealed distinct neurobehavioral patterns; individual seizures were associated with increased motor activities, while SDs were generally associated with immobility. We also identified a stereotypic SD prodrome, detectable over a minute before the onset of the DC potential shift, characterized by increased motor activity and bilateral EEG frequency changes. Our study suggests that cortical SD is a pathological manifestation in SCN1A-deficient epileptic encephalopathy.

Authors

Isamu Aiba, Yao Ning, Jeffrey L. Noebels

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Figure 7

Locomotion changes associated with seizure, SD, and seizure+SD were analyzed using video images.

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Locomotion changes associated with seizure, SD, and seizure+SD were anal...
(A) Average traces (top, mean ± SEM) and raster plots (bottom; each lane shows a single event) 30 minutes before and after event onset (line at t = 0). n = 37, 67, and 14 events for seizure, SD, and seizure+SD, respectively. (B and C) Locomotion was also analyzed by a binary method (see Results). Comparison of locomotion 10 or 5 minutes before (B) and after (C) each event. Seizure+SD is associated with reduced pre- and postevent locomotion activity. (D–F) Comparisons of locomotion changes in individual events 3 minutes before and after each event. Seizure and SD did not show consistent directional changes; however, seizure+SD events consistently reduced locomotion activity. Two-way ANOVA; event: F = 2.01, P = 0.14; time: F = 15.93, P < 0.001; interaction: F = 1.23, P = 0.30.

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