The immature brain is prone to seizure; however, the mechanism underlying this vulnerability has not been clarified. Febrile seizure is common in young children, and the use of non-steroidal anti-inflammatory drugs for febrile seizure is not recommended. In previous studies, we established that prostaglandin (PG) F2α, a product of cyclooxygenase (COX), acts as an endogenous anticonvulsant in the adult mouse. Therefore, we assumed that COX-2 activity was involved with seizure susceptibility in early life. In the present study, immature mice (postnatal day 9) were far more prone to kainic acid (KA)-induced seizures than mature mice (after postnatal day 35). Seizure activity began later in immature mice, but was more severe and was unaffected by a potent COX inhibitor, indomethacin; in contrast, indomethacin aggravated seizure activity in mature mice. Immature mouse brains exhibited little basal COX-2 expression and little KA-induced COX-2 induction, while KA-induced COX-2 expression and PGF2α release were prominent in mature brains. During brain development, COX expression was increased and glycosylated in an age-dependent manner, which was necessary for COX enzyme activity. Intracisternal PGF2α administration also reduced KA-induced seizure activity and mortality. Taken together, low COX activity and the resulting deficiency of PGF2α may be an essential cause of increased seizure susceptibility in the immature brain.
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http://dx.doi.org/10.1016/j.expneurol.2013.08.014 | DOI Listing |
ACS Nano
January 2025
School of Chemistry and Chemical Engineering, Nanjing University of Science and Technology, Nanjing 210094, P. R. China.
Neural-electronic interfaces through delivering electroceuticals to lesions and modulating pathological endogenous electrical environments offer exciting opportunities to treat drug-refractory neurological disorders. Such an interface should ideally be compatible with the neural tissue and aggressive biofluid environment. Unfortunately, no interface specifically designed for the biofluid environments is available so far; instead, simply stacking an encapsulation layer on silicon-based substrates makes them susceptible to biofluid leakage, device malfunction, and foreign-body reactions.
View Article and Find Full Text PDFiScience
January 2025
School of Biosystems and Biomedical Sciences, College of Health Sciences, Korea University, Seoul 02841, Republic of Korea.
TWIK-1 belongs to the two-pore domain K (K2P) channel family, which plays an essential role in the background K conductance of cells. Despite the development of exon 2-deleted knockout (KO) mice, the physiological role of TWIK-1 has remained largely unknown. Here, we observed that the exon 2-deleted KO mice expressed an internally deleted TWIK-1 (TWIK-1 ΔEx2) protein, which unexpectedly acts as a functional K channel.
View Article and Find Full Text PDFInt J Mol Sci
December 2024
Institute of Neurology, Department of Medical and Surgical Sciences, University Magna Graecia, 88100 Catanzaro, Italy.
Pathogenic variants are associated with neonatal epilepsies, ranging from self-limited neonatal epilepsy to -developmental and epileptic encephalopathy (DEE). In this study, next-generation sequencing was performed, applying a panel of 142 epilepsy genes on three unrelated individuals and affected family members, showing a wide variability in the epileptic spectrum. The genetic analysis revealed two likely pathogenic missense variants (c.
View Article and Find Full Text PDFJ Physiol
January 2025
Department of Biological Sciences, Southern Methodist University, Dallas, TX, USA.
Sudden unexpected death in epilepsy (SUDEP) is a devastating complication of epilepsy with possible sex-specific risk factors, although the exact relationship between sex and SUDEP remains unclear. To investigate this, we studied Kcna1 knockout (Kcna1) mice, which lack voltage-gated Kv1.1 channel subunits and are widely used as a SUDEP model that mirrors key features in humans.
View Article and Find Full Text PDFElife
January 2025
Cardiovascular Research Institute, Weill Cornell Medicine, New York City, United States.
Developmental and epileptic encephalopathies (DEEs), a class of devastating neurological disorders characterized by recurrent seizures and exacerbated by disruptions to excitatory/inhibitory balance in the brain, are commonly caused by mutations in ion channels. Disruption of, or variants in, were implicated as causal for a set of DEEs, but the underlying mechanisms were clouded because is expressed in both excitatory and inhibitory neurons, undergoes extensive alternative splicing producing multiple isoforms with distinct functions, and the overall roles of FGF13 in neurons are incompletely cataloged. To overcome these challenges, we generated a set of novel cell-type-specific conditional knockout mice.
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