| Literature DB >> 23882182 |
David C Henshall1, Tobias Engel.
Abstract
Neuronal cell death is a pathophysiological consequence of many brain insults that trigger epilepsy and has been implicated as a causal factor in epileptogenesis. Seizure-induced neuronal death features excitotoxic necrosis and apoptosis-associated signaling pathways, including activation of multiple members of the Bcl-2 gene family. The availability of mice in which individual Bcl-2 family members have been deleted has provided the means to determine whether they have causal roles in neuronal death and epileptogenesis in vivo. Studies show that multiple members of the Bcl-2 family are activated following status epilepticus and the seizure and damage phenotypes of eight different knockouts of the Bcl-2 family have now been characterized. Loss of certain pro-apoptotic members, including Puma, protected against seizure-induced neuronal death whereas loss of anti-apoptotic Mcl-1 and Bcl-w enhanced hippocampal damage. Notably, loss of two putatively pro-apoptotic members, Bak and Bmf, resulted in more seizure-damage while deletion of Bid had no effect, indicating the role of certain Bcl-2 family proteins in epileptic brain injury is distinct from their contributions following other stressors or in non-CNS tissue. Notably, Puma-deficient mice develop fewer spontaneous seizures after status epilepticus suggesting neuroprotection may preserve functional inhibition, either directly by preserving neuronal networks or indirectly, for example by limiting reactive gliosis and pro-inflammatory responses to neuronal death. Together, these studies support apoptosis-associated molecular mechanisms controlling neuronal death as a component of epileptogenesis which might be targetable to protect against seizure-damage, cognitive deficits and mitigate the severity of syndrome following epilepsy-precipitating injuries to the brain.Entities:
Keywords: apoptosis; bcl-2; brain; hippocampus; mitochondria; neuron; stroke; temporal lobe epilepsy
Year: 2013 PMID: 23882182 PMCID: PMC3712126 DOI: 10.3389/fncel.2013.00110
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Front Cell Neurosci ISSN: 1662-5102 Impact factor: 5.505
Figure 1Bcl-2 family; organization, functions, and characteristics. Schematic shows the main Bcl-2 family proteins in humans and mice along with the main conserved structural motifs (BH domains), grouped according to function and depicting amino acid length and homology between species. TM, transmembrane domain. Length refers to amino acid number in (left side) homo sapiens and (right side) mus musculus (splice variants not included). Homology is between human and mouse amino acid sequences (BLAST).
Summary of effects of genetic disruption of Bcl-2 family proteins on status epilepticus-induced neuronal death and post-status epilepsy in mice.
| Anti-apoptotic | Pilocarpine | Lower threshold for convulsions | Increased CA3 damage | Not tested | Mori et al., | |
| Anti-apoptotic | i.a. KA | Earlier onset of SE | Increased CA3 damage | Not tested | Murphy et al., | |
| Pro-apoptotic | Systemic KA | Increased seizures | Increased CA3 damage | Not tested | Fannjiang et al., | |
| PTZ | Same as wt | |||||
| Pro-apoptotic | i.h. KA | Same as wt | Same as wt | Not tested | Theofilas et al., | |
| i.a. KA | Same as wt | Reduced CA3 damage | Not tested | Murphy et al., | ||
| Systemic KA | Same as wt | Not reported | Not tested | Gimenez-Cassina et al., | ||
| Pro-apoptotic | i.a. KA | Same as wt | Same as wt | Not tested | Engel et al., | |
| Systemic KA | Same as wt | Not reported | Not tested | Gimenez-Cassina et al., | ||
| Pro-apoptotic | i.a. KA | Same as wt | Reduced CA3 damage | Reduced epileptic seizures | Engel et al., | |
| i.a. KA (high) | Same as wt | Reduced CA3 damage | Not tested | Engel et al., | ||
| Pro-apoptotic | Systemic KA, PTZ | Reduced seizures | Not reported | Not tested | Gimenez-Cassina et al., | |
| Pro-apoptotic | i.a. KA | Same as wt | Increased CA3, CA1 and hilar damage | Increased epileptic seizures | Moran et al., |
Studies performed using heterozygous, not knockout mice.
Behavioral assessment, not by EEG.
Higher dose (1 μg) of KA was used to produce more severe SE.
Mice displayed ~30% more seizures although effect did not reach statistical significance.
Abbreviations: KA, kainic acid; i.a., intra-amygdala; i.h., intra-hippocampal; PTZ, pentylenetetrazole; SE, status epilepticus; SzPC, seizure preconditioning; wt, wild-type.
Figure 2Bcl-2 family-regulated pathway and phenotypes in Bcl-2 knockout mice after status epilepticus. Cartoon depicts the relationship between the activated Bcl-2 family proteins after status epilepticus, the signaling pathways they drive toward cell death, and possible consequences of such cell death on epileptogenesis. Multiple BH3-only proteins are activated by epileptogenic insults which may promote mitochondrial dysfunction via Bax or other mechanisms, a step that can be blocked by anti-apoptotic members of the Bcl-2 family. The cell death controlled by this pathway may promote tissue repair or drive epileptogenesis via disruption of neuronal networks. The phenotype of Bcl-2 family protein knockout mice is indicted in the boxes linked by a stalk. For each, the key shows how deletion of the gene impacts convulsive thresholds (e.g., to kainate), hippocampal injury after status epilepticus or emergent spontaneous seizures. Not represented: The figure does not include other intracellular compartments in which Bcl-2 family proteins are commonly found such as the endoplasmic reticulum. SE, status epilepticus.