Core Body Temperature
core body temperature
Circuit homeostasis: keeping a level head when the brain gets hot
Core body temperature is regulated to a setpoint between 36.1 to 37.8°C, with an average fluctuation of 0.5°C during a 24-hour day. Despite mechanistic safeguards, major temperature deviations (1-3°C) from the setpoint occur in the body and in turn the brain. For unknown reasons, in most mammals (humans included), these increases in brain temperature are benign. However, macro-fluctuations in brain temperature in some cases result in deleterious outcomes such as seizures. In this talk, I will describe a mechanism for circuit-level adaptive regulation of cortical activity during macro-fluctuations in brain temperature. I will also discuss how this mechanism can be applied towards the understanding of the pathology of Autism Spectrum Disorder.
Cellular/circuit dysfunction in a model of Dravet syndrome - a severe childhood epilepsy
Dravet syndrome is a severe childhood epilepsy due to heterozygous loss-of-function mutation of the gene SCN1A, which encodes the type 1 neuronal voltage gated sodium (Na+) channel alpha-subunit Nav1.1. Prior studies in mouse models of Dravet syndrome (Scn1a+/- mice) at early developmental time points indicate that, in cerebral cortex, Nav1.1 is predominantly expressed in GABAergic interneurons (INs) and, in particular, in parvalbumin-positive fast-spiking basket cells (PV-INs). This has led to a model of Dravet syndrome pathogenesis whereby Nav1.1 mutation leads to preferential IN dysfunction, decreased synaptic inhibition, hyperexcitability, and epilepsy. We found that, at later developmental time points, the intrinsic excitability of PV-INs has essentially normalized, via compensatory reorganization of axonal Na+ channels. Instead, we found persistent and seemingly paradoxical dysfunction of putative disinhibitory INs expressing vasoactive intestinal peptide (VIP-INs). In vivo two-photon calcium imaging in neocortex during temperature-induced seizures in Scn1a+/- mice showed that mean activity of both putative principal cells and PV-INs was higher in Scn1a+/- relative to wild-type controls during quiet wakefulness at baseline and at elevated core body temperature. However, wild-type PV-INs showed a progressive synchronization in response to temperature elevation that was absent in PV-INs from Scn1a+/- mice immediately prior to seizure onset. We suggest that impaired PV-IN synchronization, perhaps via persistent axonal dysfunction, may contribute to the transition to the ictal state during temperature induced seizures in Dravet syndrome.