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GLS2 reduces the occurrence of epilepsy by affecting mitophagy function in mouse hippocampal neurons. | LitMetric

AI Article Synopsis

  • Altered mitophagy is linked to neurological disorders like epilepsy, with GLS2 playing a significant role in regulating autophagy, although its exact impact on epilepsy remains unclear.
  • The study aimed to explore how GLS2 expression and distribution affect epileptic behavior and electrophysiology in mice, particularly focusing on mitophagy as a protective mechanism.
  • Results showed that GLS2 expression decreased in epileptic models, but overexpression of GLS2 alleviated seizure activity and influenced mitophagy in the brain, suggesting GLS2 could be a potential target for epilepsy treatment.

Article Abstract

Background: Altered mitophagy has been observed in various neurological disorders, such as epilepsy. The role of mitophagy in causing neuronal damage during epileptic episodes is significant, and recent research has indicated that GLS2 plays a crucial role in regulating autophagy. However, exactly how GLS2 affects epilepsy is still unclear.

Aims: To investigate the expression and distribution characteristics of GLS2 in epilepsy, and then observed the changes in behavior and electrophysiology caused by overexpression of GLS2 in epileptic mice, and determined whether GLS2 regulated seizure-like changes in the mouse model through the protective mechanism of mitophagy.

Results: The expression of GLS2 in a kainic acid (KA)-induced epileptic mouse model and aglutamate-inducedneuronal excitatory damage in HT22 cells model was downregulation. In brief, overexpression of GLS2 can alleviate epileptic activity. Subsequently, we demonstrated that GLS2 interacts with mitophagy-related proteins in a KA-induced epilepsy mouse model. Mechanistically, overexpression of GLS2 inhibited mitophagy in epileptic mice, downregulating the expression of LC3 and reducing ROS production.

Conclusions: This study proves the GLS2 expression pattern is abnormal in epileptic mice. The function of mitophagy in hippocampal neurons is affected by GLS2, and overexpression of GLS2 can reduce the occurrence of seizure-like events (SLEs) by altering mitophagy function. Thus, GLS2 might control seizures, and our findings provide a fresh avenue for antiepileptic treatment and offer novel insights into treating and preventing epilepsy.

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Source
http://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pmc/articles/PMC11474837PMC
http://dx.doi.org/10.1111/cns.70036DOI Listing

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