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Cell-type specific changes in perisomatic inhibition in an animal model of temporal lobe epilepsy

Subject Area Molecular Biology and Physiology of Neurons and Glial Cells
Cognitive, Systems and Behavioural Neurobiology
Term from 2018 to 2023
Project identifier Deutsche Forschungsgemeinschaft (DFG) - Project number 405864679
 
Final Report Year 2025

Final Report Abstract

The hippocampus is a cortical structure with a central position in the distributed declarative memory system of the brain, often affected by brain disorders, including epilepsy. Learning and memory deficits are, therefore, common in both patients and animal models of mesial temporal lobe epilepsy (mTLE). In this proposal, we examined the possibility that properties of two subsets of perisomatic inhibitory interneurons (INs), fast-spiking (FS) and regular-spiking (RS) basket cell (BCs), undergo modification in the epileptic hippocampus affecting network dynamics and function. Specifically, we analysed cell-type specific changes in perisomatic inhibition in the CA3 region of the ventral hippocampus in a mouse model of mTLE. Although in epileptic animals perisomatic INs, as well as pyramidal cells, showed unchanged intrinsic biophysical membrane properties, differences were found in their spatial density and distribution, synaptic properties and contribution to network activity. At the network level, there was a switch in plasticity of sharp-wave-ripples (SWRs) induced by transient gamma oscillations: long-lasting potentiation (network LTP, nLTP) was observed in control network, whereas depression (nLTD) emerged in epilepsy. Metabotropic glutamate receptor 5 (mGluR5) is involved in network plasticity in both control and epileptic animals and its expression was altered in the epileptic hippocampus. Furthermore, we could confirm that nLTD can be observed in hippocampal tissue from drug-resistant epileptic patients. At the level of single INs, cell type-specific difference was found in synaptic plasticity between BC types: FS BCs, providing phasic inhibition, demonstrated long-lasting synaptic potentiation (LTP) in control mice, but showed a loss of LTP in epilepsy. Conversely, RS BCs, mediating tonic inhibition, showed synaptic depression (LTD) in control animals and a loss of LTD in epilepsy. We propose that specific processes involved in the regulation of INs contribute to aberrant network excitability and promote a longlasting depression of network activity in the epileptic hippocampus. A switch from LTP to LTD occurs in the hippocampal circuitry, which can compensate for overexcitation in epilepsy. While cellular morphology and physiology of FS and RS BCs are not changed, they contribute to the altered network plasticity and dynamics.

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