TopicNeuroscience

cortical hyperexcitability

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3Total items
2ePosters
1Seminar

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Sparks, flames, and inferno: epileptogenesis in the glioblastoma microenvironment

Jeff Noebels
Baylor College of Medicine
Oct 7, 2020

Glioblastoma cells trigger pharmacoresistant seizures that may promote tumor growth and diminish the quality of remaining life. To define the relationship between growth of glial tumors and their neuronal microenvironment, and to identify genomic biomarkers and mechanisms that may point to better prognosis and treatment of drug resistant epilepsy in brain cancer, we are analyzing a new generation of genetically defined CRISPR/in utero electroporation inborn glioblastoma (GBM) tumor models engineered in mice. The molecular pathophysiology of glioblastoma cells and surrounding neurons and untransformed astrocytes are compared at serial stages of tumor development. Initial studies reveal that epileptiform EEG spiking is a very early and reliable preclinical signature of GBM expansion in these mice, followed by rapidly progressive seizures and death within weeks. FACS-sorted transcriptomic analysis of cortical astrocytes reveals the expansion of a subgroup enriched in pro-synaptogenic genes that may drive hyperexcitability, a novel mechanism of epileptogenesis. Using a prototypical GBM IUE model, we systematically define and correlate the earliest appearance of cortical hyperexcitability with progressive cortical tumor cell invasion, including spontaneous episodes of spreading cortical depolarization, innate inflammation, and xCT upregulation in the peritumoral microenvironment. Blocking this glutamate exporter reduces seizure load. We show that the host genome contributes to seizure risk by generating tumors in a monogenic deletion strain (MapT/tau -/-) that raises cortical seizure threshold. We also show that the tumor variant profile determines epilepsy risk. Our genetic dissection approach sets the stage to broadly explore the developmental biology of personalized tumor/host interactions in mice engineered with novel human tumor mutations in specified glial cell lineages.

ePosterNeuroscience

Decreased noradrenaline levels contribute to cortical hyperexcitability in mouse models of amyotrophic lateral sclerosis

Jelena Scekic-Zahirovic, Aurore Brunet, Vincent Douchamps, Geoffrey Stuart-Lopez, Johan Gilet, Virginie Andry, Véronique Marchand-Pauvert, Yannick Goumon, Romain Goutagny, Caroline Rouaux
ePosterNeuroscience

SST-positive GABAergic interneurons counterbalance cortical hyperexcitability after traumatic brain injury in mice by a switch of α-subunits in L-type voltage-gated calcium channels

Natascha Ihbe, Florie Le Prieult, Qi Wang, Ute Distler, Malte Sielaff, Stefan Tenzer, Serge Thal, Thomas Mittmann

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