INVESTIGATING SEIZURE ONSET AND FIRING RATE ALTERATIONS IN THE DEVELOPING HIPPOCAMPUS OF AN SCN2A (P.A263V) MOUSE MODEL
DZNE Bonn
Presentation
Date TBA
Event Information
Poster Board
PS06-09PM-133
Poster
View posterAbstract
This study focuses on the gain-of-function p.A263V SCN2A variant, which causes severe neonatal and infantile epilepsy but can show age-dependent seizure remission. A leading hypothesis suggests that remission reflects the developmental switch from Nav1.2 to Nav1.6 at the AIS. However, neurological impairments often persist after seizures subside, indicating lasting circuit dysfunction. We generated a mouse model carrying the Scn2a p.A263V mutation and observed spontaneous hippocampal seizures from postnatal day 2–3. Heterozygous, but not homozygous, mice showed complete seizure remission after postnatal day 20, coinciding with the Nav1.2-to-Nav1.6 switch. Using in vivo Neuropixels recordings and activity-
dependent c-Fos staining, we assessed hippocampal activity across development. Our results identify abnormal CA3 activity as a key driver of early seizures. Despite pyramidal neuron hyperexcitability, overall hippocampal activity outside seizures is reduced early in development, consistent with compensatory inhibitory mechanisms. After remission, pyramidal neuron activity normalizes, while interneuron activity remains altered, suggesting persistent circuit-level changes in SCN2A-related disorders.
Recommended posters
DISRUPTED NETWORK MATURATION AND EXCITABILITY IN SCN2A CHANNELOPATHIES: A WINDOW FOR EARLY INTERVENTION
Yana Reva, Daniil Kirianov, Katharina Ulrich, Despina Tsortouktzidis, Martina Simonti, Birgit Engeland, Malte Stockebrand, Stephan Marguet, Sandrine Cestèle, Massimo Mantegazza, Dirk Isbrandt
A NEW MOUSE MODEL OF NON-SYNDROMIC AUTISM SPECTRUM DISORDER CARRYING THE HUMAN NEGATIVE-DOMINANT MUTATION L1314P OF THE SCN2A/NAV1.2 SODIUM CHANNEL
Martina Simonti, Ameer Rasheed, Marta Zaforas, Fabrizio Capitano, Sandrine Cestèle, Massimo Mantegazza
CELL TYPE–SPECIFIC EFFECTS OF INCREASED PERSISTENT SODIUM CURRENT ON NEURONAL FIRING
Manon Dobrigna, Sandrine Cestèle, Massimo Mantegazza
RESTORING THE CLOCK: CIRCADIAN RHYTHM MODULATION AS A NOVEL THERAPY FOR SCN2A-ASSOCIATED AUTISM SPECTRUM DISORDER
AbdelRahman Elshaarawy, Wendy Walker, Ahmed Eltokhi
MODELLING THE SCN2A DISEASE SPECTRUM BY USING PATIENT INDUCED PLURIPOTENT STEM CELL-DERIVED CORTICAL TISSUE
Cristiana Mattei, Montanna Waters, Maria Law, Miaomiao Mao, Erlina Mohamed Syazwan, Danielle Apted, Jacqueline Heighway, Sean Byars, Steven Petrou, Snezana Maljevic
NETWORK MECHANISMS OF EPILEPTOGENESIS IN A MOUSE MODEL OF HCN1 DEVELOPMENTAL AND EPILEPTIC ENCEPHALOPATHIES
Viktoriia Shumkova, Dirk Isbrandt