| Literature DB >> 28397067 |
James P Reynolds1, Eva M Jimenez-Mateos1, Li Cao2, Fang Bian2, Mariana Alves1, Suzanne F Miller-Delaney1, An Zhou2, David C Henshall3.
Abstract
Brief, non-harmful seizures (preconditioning) can temporarily protect the brain against prolonged, otherwise injurious seizures. Following focal-onset status epilepticus (SE) in preconditioned (tolerance) and sham-preconditioned (injury) mice, we screened for protein changes using a proteomic approach and identified several putative candidates of epileptic tolerance. Among SE-induced changes to both proteomic screens, proteins clustered in key regulatory pathways, including protein trafficking and cytoskeletal regulation. Downregulation of one such protein, ubiquitin carboxyl-terminal hydrolase isozyme L1 (UCHL1), was unique to injury and not evident in tolerance. UCHL1 inhibition decreased hippocampal ubiquitin, disrupted UPS function, interfered with seizure termination and exacerbated seizure-induced cell death. Though UCHL1 transcription was maintained after SE, we observed downregulation of the pro-translational antisense Uchl1 (AsUchl1) and confirmed that both AsUchl1 and rapamycin can increase UCHL1 expression in vivo. These data indicate that the post-transcriptional loss of UCHL1 following SE is deleterious to neuronal survival and may contribute to hyperexcitability, and are suggestive of a novel modality of rapamycin therapy.Entities:
Keywords: Long non-coding RNA; Proteomics; Temporal lobe epilepsy; UCHL1; Ubiquitin proteasome system
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Year: 2017 PMID: 28397067 PMCID: PMC5505805 DOI: 10.1007/s11064-017-2260-6
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Neurochem Res ISSN: 0364-3190 Impact factor: 3.996