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Cellular Circuit Dysfunction Development

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SeminarPast EventNeuroscience

Cellular/circuit dysfunction across development in a model of Dravet syndrome

Ethan Goldberg

Prof

Children's Hospital of Philadelphia

Schedule
Wednesday, March 3, 2021

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Schedule

Wednesday, March 3, 2021

4:00 PM Europe/London

Host: Clinical and Experimental Epilepsy

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Event Information

Format

Past Seminar

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Host

Clinical and Experimental Epilepsy

Duration

70.00 minutes

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Abstract

Dravet syndrome (DS) is a neurodevelopmental disorder caused by heterozygous loss-of-function of the gene SCN1A encoding the voltage-gated sodium channel subunit Nav1.1, and is defined by treatment-resistant epilepsy, intellectual impairment, and sudden death. However, disease mechanisms remain unclear, as previously-identified deficiency in action potential generation of Nav1.1-expressing parvalbumin-positive fast-spiking GABAergic interneurons (PV-INs) in DS (Scn1a+/-) mice normalizes during development. We used a novel approach that facilitated the assessment of PV-IN function at both early (post-natal day (P) 16-21) and late (P35-56) time points in the same mice. We confirmed that PV-IN spike generation was impaired at P16-21 in all mice (those deceased from SUDEP by P35 and those surviving to P35-56). However, unitary synaptic transmission assessed in PV-IN:principal cell paired recordings was severely dysfunctional selectively in mice recorded at P16-21 that did not survive to P35. Spike generation in surviving mice had normalized by P35-56; yet we again identified abnormalities in synaptic transmission in surviving mice. We propose that early dysfunction of PV-IN spike propagation drives epilepsy severity and risk of sudden death, while persistent dysfunction of spike propagation contributes to chronic DS pathology.

Topics

GABAergic interneuronsSCN1ASUDEPaction potentialdevelopmentdravetdravet syndromeepilepsynav11parvalbumin-positivesynaptic transmission

About the Speaker

Ethan Goldberg

Prof

Children's Hospital of Philadelphia

Contact & Resources

Personal Website

goldbergneurolab.com

@Go3than

Follow on Twitter/X

twitter.com/Go3than

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