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Recurrent neonatal seizures increase tonic inhibition and respond to enhancers of δ-containing GABAA receptors
Gage T. Liddiard, Gordon F. Buchanan, Mark L. Schultz, Joseph Glykys
Gage T. Liddiard, Gordon F. Buchanan, Mark L. Schultz, Joseph Glykys
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Research Article Cell biology Neuroscience

Recurrent neonatal seizures increase tonic inhibition and respond to enhancers of δ-containing GABAA receptors

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Abstract

About one-third of neonatal seizures do not respond to the first-line anticonvulsant phenobarbital, which activates phasic inhibition and whose effectiveness decreases over time. Whether enhancing tonic inhibition can treat refractory seizures or status epilepticus in neonates remains uncertain. We evaluated the effect of recurrent seizure-like events (SLE) on α5– and δ–GABAA receptor (α5- and δ-GABAAR) subunit expression and tonic inhibition in neonatal C57BL/6J mice (P6–9, both sexes) using acute brain slices. We investigated the impact of THIP (gaboxadol) on neonatal behavioral seizures, neuronal apoptosis, and neurodegeneration in vivo. We found neonatal neocortical expression of α5- and δ-GABAAR subunits. Blocking α5-GABAARs with L-655,708 did not affect acute neonatal SLE, whereas enhancing δ-GABAARs with THDOC, a neurosteroid, reduced them. The α5- and δ-GABAAR membrane expression increased after 8 hours of neonatal SLE and correlated with increased δ-mediated conductance but not α5-mediated conductance. Enhancing tonic inhibition was more effective in reducing recurrent neonatal SLE (8 hours) compared with early treatment. Increasing tonic inhibition reduced the duration, severity, and number of kainic acid–induced in vivo neonatal behavioral seizures without increasing neurodegeneration or apoptosis. We conclude that recurrent neonatal seizures increase tonic inhibition. Therefore, enhancing tonic inhibition may be a treatment strategy for prolonged neonatal status epilepticus.

Authors

Gage T. Liddiard, Gordon F. Buchanan, Mark L. Schultz, Joseph Glykys

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Figure 6

The α5-GABAAR–mediated currents increase after recurrent neonatal seizure-like events, but their proportion remains the same.

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The α5-GABAAR–mediated currents increase after recurrent neonatal seizur...
Representative whole-cell voltage-clamp recordings of a neocortical pyramidal cell (layer V) without seizure incubation (Ctrl, top) and after 8 hours of Low-Mg2+ (SLE, below), during perfusion of aCSF (A) or THIP 10 μM (B) before the application of L-655 (200 nM), Vh –70 mV. Top line indicates various drug perfusions; right lines indicate fits to the all-points histograms under each condition (black = α5-mediated current blocked by L-655, gray = net and residual currents). (C) α5-mediated tonic conductances with no THIP (Ctrl: 4.32 pS/pF [3.02, 5.63], SLE: 6.93 pS/pF [3.09, 10.8], P = 0.182, unpaired t test, n = 9, 10) and α5-mediated tonic conductances under 10 μM THIP (Ctrl: 11.3 pS/pF [8.61, 14.1], SLE: 23.9 pS/pF [13.7, 34.1], unpaired t test, n = 6, 5). (D) Percent conductance mediated by α5-containing GABAARs with and without THIP (control: 61.2% [49, 73.5] and 25.5% [13.0, 37.9], SLE: 48.7% [38.3, 59.1] and 24.8% [20.2, 29.3], 1-way ANOVA, F(3, 26) = 12, P < 0.0001; Šídák’s multiple comparisons test; n = 9, 6, 10, 5, respectively). Circles: individual recordings. Black lines: mean ± 95% CI.

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