Single-pulse stimulation of cerebellar nuclei stops epileptic thalamic activity.

Brain Stimul

Department of Neuroscience, Erasmus Medical Center, 3015, AA Rotterdam, the Netherlands; Department for Developmental Origins of Disease, University Medical Center Utrecht Brain Center and Wilhelmina Children's Hospital, Utrecht Medical Center, 3508, AB Utrecht, the Netherlands. Electronic address:

Published: November 2021

AI Article Synopsis

  • Epileptic absence seizures can be controlled by stimulating cerebellar nuclei (CN) neurons that communicate with the thalamus, but the mechanism of how this affects thalamo-cortical oscillations is unclear.
  • The study tested whether single-pulse optogenetic stimulation of CN neurons could disrupt synchronized thalamo-cortical activity during seizures in a mouse model of absence epilepsy.
  • Results showed that this stimulation effectively desynchronized thalamic firing during seizures, which may clarify how cerebellar stimulation can terminate seizure activity and influence thalamic pathways.

Article Abstract

Background: Epileptic (absence) seizures in the cerebral cortex can be stopped by pharmacological and optogenetic stimulation of the cerebellar nuclei (CN) neurons that innervate the thalamus. However, it is unclear how such stimulation can modify underlying thalamo-cortical oscillations.

Hypothesis: Here we tested whether rhythmic synchronized thalamo-cortical activity during absence seizures can be desynchronized by single-pulse optogenetic stimulation of CN neurons to stop seizure activity.

Methods: We performed simultaneous thalamic single-cell and electrocorticographical recordings in awake tottering mice, a genetic model of absence epilepsy, to investigate the rhythmicity and synchronicity. Furthermore, we tested interictally the impact of single-pulse optogenetic CN stimulation on thalamic and cortical recordings.

Results: We show that thalamic firing is highly rhythmic and synchronized with cortical spike-and-wave discharges during absence seizures and that this phase-locked activity can be desynchronized upon single-pulse optogenetic stimulation of CN neurons. Notably, this stimulation of CN neurons was more effective in stopping seizures than direct, focal stimulation of groups of afferents innervating the thalamus. During interictal periods, CN stimulation evoked reliable but heterogeneous responses in thalamic cells in that they could show an increase or decrease in firing rate at various latencies, bi-phasic responses with an initial excitatory and subsequent inhibitory response, or no response at all.

Conclusion: Our data indicate that stimulation of CN neurons and their fibers in thalamus evokes differential effects in its downstream pathways and desynchronizes phase-locked thalamic neuronal firing during seizures, revealing a neurobiological mechanism that may explain how cerebellar stimulation can stop seizures.

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Source
http://dx.doi.org/10.1016/j.brs.2021.05.002DOI Listing

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