AI Article Synopsis

  • Levetiracetam is an FDA-approved medication used primarily for treating epilepsy, and its mechanism of action is associated with binding to the SV2A protein in neurons.
  • The study found that excess levels of SV2A in hippocampal neurons reduce synaptic release probability and mimics the effects observed in neurons lacking SV2, which can lead to severe seizures.
  • Treatment with levetiracetam effectively normalizes neurotransmission and restores synaptic levels of SV2 and another protein called synaptotagmin, indicating that both supply and regulation of SV2 are crucial for healthy synaptic function.

Article Abstract

Levetiracetam is an FDA-approved drug used to treat epilepsy and other disorders of the nervous system. Although it is known that levetiracetam binds the synaptic vesicle protein SV2A, how drug binding affects synaptic functioning remains unknown. Here we report that levetiracetam reverses the effects of excess SV2A in autaptic hippocampal neurons. Expression of an SV2A-EGFP fusion protein produced a ∼1.5-fold increase in synaptic levels of SV2, and resulted in reduced synaptic release probability. The overexpression phenotype parallels that seen in neurons from SV2 knockout mice, which experience severe seizures. Overexpression of SV2A also increased synaptic levels of the calcium-sensor protein synaptotagmin, an SV2-binding protein whose stability and trafficking are regulated by SV2. Treatment with levetiracetam rescued normal neurotransmission and restored normal levels of SV2 and synaptotagmin at the synapse. These results indicate that changes in SV2 expression in either direction impact neurotransmission, and suggest that levetiracetam may modulate SV2 protein interactions.

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Source
http://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pmc/articles/PMC3248421PMC
http://journals.plos.org/plosone/article?id=10.1371/journal.pone.0029560PLOS

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