| Literature DB >> 30837840 |
Pascal Bielefeld1, Marijn Schouten1, Guido M Meijer1, Marit J Breuk1, Karlijne Geijtenbeek1, Sedef Karayel1, Alisa Tiaglik1, Anna H Vuuregge1, Ruth A L Willems1, Diede Witkamp1, Paul J Lucassen1, Juan M Encinas2,3,4, Carlos P Fitzsimons1.
Abstract
Convulsive seizures promote adult hippocampal neurogenesis (AHN) through a transient activation of neural stem/progenitor cells (NSPCs) in the subgranular zone (SGZ) of the dentate gyrus (DG). However, in a significant population of epilepsy patients, non-convulsive seizures (ncSZ) are observed. The response of NSPCs to non-convulsive seizure induction has not been characterized before. We here studied first the short-term effects of controlled seizure induction on NSPCs fate and identity. We induced seizures of controlled intensity by intrahippocampally injecting increasing doses of the chemoconvulsant kainic acid (KA) and analyzed their effect on subdural EEG recordings, hippocampal structure, NSPC proliferation and the number and location of immature neurons shortly after seizure onset. After establishing a KA dose that elicits ncSZ, we then analyzed the effects of ncSZ on NSPC proliferation and NSC identity in the hippocampus. ncSZ specifically triggered neuroblast proliferation, but did not induce proliferation of NSPCs in the SGZ, 3 days post seizure onset. However, ncSZ induced significant changes in NSPC composition in the hippocampus, including the generation of reactive NSCs. Interestingly, intrahippocampal injection of a combination of two anti microRNA oligonucleotides targeting microRNA-124 and -137 normalized neuroblast proliferation and prevented NSC loss in the DG upon ncSZ. Our results show for the first time that ncSZ induce significant changes in neuroblast proliferation and NSC composition. Simultaneous antagonism of both microRNA-124 and -137 rescued seizure-induced alterations in NSPC, supporting their coordinated action in the regulation of NSC fate and proliferation and their potential for future seizure therapies.Entities:
Keywords: adult hippocampal neurogenesis; kainic acid; microRNA; neural stem cell fate; non-convulsive seizures
Year: 2019 PMID: 30837840 PMCID: PMC6389789 DOI: 10.3389/fnmol.2019.00031
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Front Mol Neurosci ISSN: 1662-5099 Impact factor: 5.639
FIGURE 1Characterization of the intrahippocampal dose-dependent KA model. (A) EEG recordings during the first 4 h of status epilepticus show clear divergent patterns dependent on the KA dose, varying from single spikes(∗) (0.74 mM) and repetitive single spikes (2.22 mM), to repetitive spike-bursts (∇) (20 mM). (B) Classification of behavioral seizures during the first 4 h of status epilepticus assessed using the Racine scale. (C) A Nissl staining shows dispersion of the granule cell layer. (D) Quantification of the granule dispersion 28 days after KA administration. (E) Immunohistochemistry against GFAP reveals KA dose-dependent induction of astrogliosis. (F) Quantification of GFAP coverage of the total hippocampus 28 days after KA administration. ∗P < 0.05.
FIGURE 2Characterization of KA dose-dependency on proliferation and immature (DCX+) neurons. (A) Immunohistochemistry against Ki67 reveals an induction in the total proliferation in the whole hippocampus of the dentate gyrus, independent of KA dose. This effect is mainly driven by increased proliferation in the SGZ (B) of the DG, and not by ectopic proliferation in the oGCL (C) or the Hilus (D). (E) Immunohistochemistry against DCX reveals an induction of DCX+ immature neurons in the whole hippocampus, irrespective of the KA dose. However, ectopic DCX+ immature neurons are only present in the oGCL (F), the ML (G), or the hilus (H) after higher KA doses. ∗p < 0.05 arrows indicate immunopositive cells at each studied location.
FIGURE 3Effects of non-convulsive seizures on NSPC proliferation. Example confocal images of (A) Type A NSCs, (B) NPCs, and (C) Neuroblasts analyzed. (D–F) Quantification of Ki67+ proliferative cells among (D) Type A NSCs, (E) NPCs, and (F) Neuroblasts. The relative proliferative proportion of both Type A NSCs and NPCs did not change upon the induction of ncSZ, while a significant induction of proliferation was observed in neuroblasts. ∗P < 0.05.
FIGURE 4Effects of non-convulsive seizures on NSC identity. Example confocal images of (A) Type A NSCs (B) Type B NSCs (C) reactive NSCs, as assessed by marker expression and morphology. (D) Upon induction of ncSZ a significant loss of Type A NSCs was found. (E) At the same time, the relative proportion of Type B NSCs in the NSC pool also decreases upon induction of ncSZ. (F) Simultaneously, a significant increase in the number of rNSCs occurs, an effect that becomes even more visible when comparing the rNSC/Type A NSC ratio (G). ∗P < 0.05.
FIGURE 5Combined treatment with anti miR-124 and -137 AMOs partially restores non-convulsive seizure-induced alterations in proliferation and NSC identity 3 days post SE onset. (A) Expression levels of miR-124 72 h post ncSZ and following AMO administration. (B) Expression levels of miR-137 72 h after ncSZ and following AMO administration. (C) Expression levels of the unrelated miR-19a 72 h after ncSZ, and following AMO administration. (D–F) combined AMO treatment successfully rescued the ncSZ-induced neuroblast proliferation, while not altering proliferation levels in Type A NSCs and NPCs. (G) The loss of Type A NSCs was rescued by the administration of the combined AMOs (Sal + NT vs. KA + AMOs, ns). (H) The decrease in the relative proportion of Type B NSCs among the NSC pool was also rescued by the AMO treatment (Sal + NT vs. KA + AMO, ns; KA + NT vs. KA + AMO, P < 0.05). (I) The induction of rNSCs upon ncSZ was not rescued by the AMO treatment; however, (J) as the number of Type A NSCs was restored, the rNSC/Type A NSC ratio was partially restored (Sal + NT vs. KA + AMO, ns). (K) Administration of individual AMOs 2 h post ncSZ partially prevents the loss of Type A NSCs. (L) Administration of individual AMOs 2 h post ncSZ did not prevent the loss of Type B NSCs. ∗P < 0.05.