ePoster

AUTAPTIC SELF-INHIBITION OF PARVALBUMIN INTERNEURONS DRIVES NETWORK HYPEREXCITABILITY IN GABAA RECEPTOR GAIN-OF-FUNCTION ENCEPHALOPATHY

Anna Nielsenand 11 co-authors

University of Copenhagen

FENS Forum 2026 (2026)
Barcelona, Spain
Board PS05-09AM-344

Presentation

Date TBA

Board: PS05-09AM-344

Poster preview

AUTAPTIC SELF-INHIBITION OF PARVALBUMIN INTERNEURONS DRIVES NETWORK HYPEREXCITABILITY IN GABAA RECEPTOR GAIN-OF-FUNCTION ENCEPHALOPATHY poster preview

Event Information

Poster Board

PS05-09AM-344

Abstract

Pathogenic variants in genes encoding GABAA receptors lead to severe developmental and epileptic encephalopathies. In patients, nearly half of these variants result in gain-of-function (GOF) mutations, while the remainder lead to loss-of-function (LOF) effects. Given that epilepsy is canonically linked with excessive excitation or reduced inhibition, it is paradoxical that GOF mutations – expected to enhance inhibition - lead to earlier seizure onset and increased symptom severity. Moreover, patients with GOF variants are frequently resistant to standard antiseizure medications. The mechanism by which enhanced GABAA receptor activity leads to hyperexcitability remains unclear.
Using a GOF mouse model carrying a missense mutation in the GABAA β3 subunit (Gabrb3 E77K), we found that feedforward inhibition (FFI) in the somatosensory cortex undergoes a developmental switch. In young animals, FFI was increased, consistent with enhanced receptor function. In contrast, in adult animals, FFI was unexpectedly and strongly reduced. Paired recordings between parvalbumin-positive (PV+) interneurons and pyramidal cells showed no alteration in monosynaptic inhibitory strength, suggesting an alteration in circuit-level organization. In support, we identified an increase in the prevalence of autaptic self-inhibiting connections in PV+ interneurons. Enhanced autaptic inhibition likely suppresses PV+ neuron excitability, thereby shifting the cortical network toward excess excitation. Together, these findings establish a paradoxical developmental loss in cortical inhibition in a GABAA receptor GOF mouse model and implicate elevated autaptic inhibition as a circuit-level mechanism of disinhibition contributing to hyperexcitability. These results suggest that therapeutic intervention may be most effective early in development, before maladaptive network reorganization becomes established.

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