| Literature DB >> 34335188 |
Abstract
Epilepsy is one of the most common neurological disorders - estimated to affect at least 65 million worldwide. Most of the epilepsy research has so far focused on how to dampen neuronal discharges and to explain how changes in intrinsic neuronal activity or network function cause seizures. As a result, pharmacological therapy has largely been limited to symptomatic treatment targeted at neurons. Given the expanding spectrum of functions ascribed to the non-neuronal constituents of the brain, in both physiological brain function and in brain disorders, it is natural to closely consider the roles of astrocytes in epilepsy. It is now widely accepted that astrocytes are key controllers of the composition of the extracellular fluids, and may directly interact with neurons by releasing gliotransmitters. A central tenet is that astrocytic intracellular Ca2+ signals promote release of such signaling substances, either through synaptic or non-synaptic mechanisms. Accruing evidence suggests that astrocytic Ca2+ signals play important roles in both seizures and epilepsy, and this review aims to highlight the current knowledge of the roles of this central astrocytic signaling mechanism in ictogenesis and epileptogenesis.Entities:
Keywords: IP3; astrocyte; astrogliosis; calcium signaling; epilepsy; epileptogenesis; ictogenesis
Year: 2021 PMID: 34335188 PMCID: PMC8320018 DOI: 10.3389/fncel.2021.695380
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Front Cell Neurosci ISSN: 1662-5102 Impact factor: 5.505
Key publications investigating the roles of astrocytic Ca2 + signalling in ictogenesis and epileptogenesis.
| Publication | Model | Ca2+ indicator | Main findings |
| Rat hippocampal slices, 4-AP | Fluo-4 AM | Adding IP3 in astrocytes causes epileptiform activity due to glutamate, and that astrocytic Ca2+ signals occur during 4-AP seizures | |
| Rat hippocampal slices: 4-AP, zero-Mg2+, bicuculline, penicillin Mouse cortex, | Fluo-4 AM | Increased astrocytic Ca2+ signaling | |
| Mouse cortical-hippocampal slices: zero-Mg2+ and picrotoxin, or 0.5 mM Mg2+ and 8.5 mM K+ | Indo-1 AM or OGB-1 AM | A correlation between astrocytic Ca2+ and SICs, but activation of extrasynaptic NMDA activation by astrocytes is not necessary for either ictal or interictal epileptiform events | |
| Mouse, | Fluo-4 AM | Increase in astrocytic Ca2+ signals during SE. See also under “Epileptogenesis” | |
| Mouse entorhinal cortex slice: Picrotoxin/zero-Mg2+ Whole guinea pig: Bicuculline | OGB-1 AM / Rhod-2 | Astrocytic Ca2+ signals are triggered by ictal but not interictal events, and can be inhibited by blocking mGluRs and purinergic receptors. Astrocytic Ca2+ signals contribute to the excitation of neurons, and blocking of early ictal astrocytic Ca2+ signals prevent spread of ictal activity. | |
| Rat cortex, | OGB-1 AM or Rhod-2 AM | Increased Ca2+ signals in astrocytes during seizures, but blocking of these did not affect epileptiform discharges or vascular dynamics associated with the seizures | |
| Mouse hippocampus, | GCaMP6f in astrocytes | Prominent astrocytic Ca2+ activity preceding local neuronal recruitment to seizure activity in hippocampus | |
| Zebra fish: PTZ | GCaMP6s in astrocytes | Large activations of astrocytic Ca2+ signals in the pre-ictal state and that astrocytic Ca2+ signals contribute to excitation of neurons | |
| Mouse cortex, | OGB-1 AM | Absolute levels of Ca2+ in the astrocytic endfeet correlates with vascular tone during seizures | |
| Mouse cortex, | Fluo-4 AM | An increase in astrocytic Ca2+ signals at day 3 after SE due to mGluR5 signaling. Blocking this hyperactivity attenuated neuronal death | |
| Mouse hippocampal slices: intracortical kainate injection. Early epileptogenesis (1, 3, and 7 days after SE) | GCaMP5E | Increased Ca2+ signaling in hippocampal astrocytes upon schaffer collateral stimulation at days 1 and 3 after SE mediated by mGluR | |
| Mouse hippocampal slices, at 1–3, 7–9, or 28–30 days after SE | GCaMP5G | mGluR5-mediated Ca2+ signaling re-emerges in epileptogenesis | |
| Mentioned in | 4 weeks after pilocarpine induced SE | Not known | Increased Ca2+ signaling in reactive astrocytes |
| Mouse hippocampus, | GCaMP6f | Episodic spontaneous hyperactivity of reactive astrocytes within/close to the sclerotic hippocampus | |
| Rat, hippocampal slices, Lithium-pilocarpine | OGB-1 AM | A reduction in large size astrocytic Ca2+ events in atrophic astrocytes | |
FIGURE 1Potential roles of astrocytic Ca2+ signaling in epilepsy. Strong astrocytic Ca2+ signals have been shown to occur in the emergency of acute seizures (in ictogenesis), that are probably triggered by neurotransmitters released by neurons. Ca2+ increases at the onset of seizures are known to be partly mediated by release through IP3R2 from the endoplasmic reticulum, even though pronounced Ca2+ signaling is present also in mice devoid of IP3R2. It is thought that intracellular Ca2+ increases may trigger proconvulsive gliotransmitter release. In astrocytic endfeet, increased Ca2+ signaling has been shown to correlate with ictal vasodilation. Epileptogenesis triggers a pronounced increase in mGluR5 expression, mGluR5-mediated Ca2+ signaling, and increased glutamate uptake. An increase in astrocytic Ca2+ signaling has been demonstrated in the days after status epilepticus, and aberrant Ca2+ signaling at later time points in the epileptogenesis has been anecdotally reported. Increased Ca2+ signaling could potentially cause both the release of glutamate (pro-convulsive), purines (pro-convulsive), and GABA (anti-convulsive, through Bestrophin-1 channels). In astrocytic endfeet in epileptic tissue a pronounced loss of aquaporin-4 (AQP4) and the K+ inwardly rectifying channel Kir4.1 can potentially be due to Ca2+ activated proteases causing a disassembly of the dystrophin associated protein complex (DAPC) tethering AQP4 and Kir4.1 to perivascular endfeet.