BAD and KATP channels regulate neuron excitability and epileptiform activity.
Juan Ramón Martínez-FrançoisMaría Carmen Fernández-AgüeraNidhi NathwaniCarolina LahmannVeronica L BurnhamNika N DanialGary YellenPublished in: eLife (2018)
Brain metabolism can profoundly influence neuronal excitability. Mice with genetic deletion or alteration of Bad (BCL-2 agonist of cell death) exhibit altered brain-cell fuel metabolism, accompanied by resistance to acutely induced epileptic seizures; this seizure protection is mediated by ATP-sensitive potassium (KATP) channels. Here we investigated the effect of BAD manipulation on KATP channel activity and excitability in acute brain slices. We found that BAD's influence on neuronal KATP channels was cell-autonomous and directly affected dentate granule neuron (DGN) excitability. To investigate the role of neuronal KATP channels in the anticonvulsant effects of BAD, we imaged calcium during picrotoxin-induced epileptiform activity in entorhinal-hippocampal slices. BAD knockout reduced epileptiform activity, and this effect was lost upon knockout or pharmacological inhibition of KATP channels. Targeted BAD knockout in DGNs alone was sufficient for the antiseizure effect in slices, consistent with a 'dentate gate' function that is reinforced by increased KATP channel activity.
Keyphrases
- cerebral ischemia
- cell death
- white matter
- transcranial direct current stimulation
- resting state
- drug induced
- stem cells
- high glucose
- adipose tissue
- gene expression
- liver failure
- skeletal muscle
- metabolic syndrome
- blood brain barrier
- multiple sclerosis
- brain injury
- cancer therapy
- genome wide
- respiratory failure
- wild type