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AFRICAN RESEARCH NEXUS

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neuroscience

Excitatory effects of parvalbumin-expressing interneurons maintain hippocampal epileptiform activity via synchronous afterdischarges

Journal of Neuroscience, Volume 34, No. 46, Year 2014

Epileptic seizures are characterized by periods of hypersynchronous, hyperexcitability within brain networks. Most seizures involve two stages: an initial tonic phase, followed by a longer clonic phase that is characterized by rhythmic bouts of synchronized network activity called afterdischarges (ADs). Here we investigate the cellular and network mechanisms underlying hippocampal ADs in an effort to understand how they maintain seizure activity. Using in vitro hippocampal slice models from rats and mice, we performed electrophysiological recordings from CA3 pyramidal neurons to monitor network activity and changes in GABAergic signaling during epileptiform activity. First, we show that the highest synchrony occurs during clonic ADs, consistent with the idea that specific circuit dynamics underlie this phase of the epileptiform activity. We then show that ADs require intact GABAergic synaptic transmission, which becomes excitatory as a result of a transient collapse in the chloride (Cl–) reversal potential. The depolarizing effects of GABA are strongest at the soma of pyramidal neurons, which implicates somatic-targeting interneurons inADactivity. To test this, we used optogenetic techniques to selectively control the activity of somatic-targeting parvalbumin-expressing (PV–) interneurons. Channelrhodopsin-2-mediated activation of PV+ interneurons during the clonic phase generated excitatory GABAergic responses in pyramidal neurons, which were sufficient to elicit and entrain synchronousADactivity across the network. Finally, archaerhodopsin-mediated selective silencing ofPV+ interneurons reduced the occurrence of ADs during the clonic phase. Therefore, we propose that activity-dependent Cl– accumulation subverts the actions of PV+ interneurons to perpetuate rather than terminate pathological network hyperexcitability during the clonic phase of seizures.
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Citations: 149
Authors: 5
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