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Maladaptive cortical hyperactivity upon recovery from experimental autoimmune encephalomyelitis.

Erik EllwardtGautam PramanikDirk LuchtmanTanja NovkovicEduardo Rosales JubalJohannes VogtIsabelle ArnouxChristina Francisca VogelaarShibajee MandalMelanie SchmalzZeke BargerInigo Ruiz de AzuaTanja KuhlmannBeat LutzThomas MittmannStefan BittnerFrauke ZippAlbrecht Stroh
Published in: Nature neuroscience (2018)
Multiple sclerosis (MS) patients exhibit neuropsychological symptoms in early disease despite the immune attack occurring predominantly in white matter and spinal cord. It is unclear why neurodegeneration may start early in the disease and is prominent in later stages. We assessed cortical microcircuit activity by employing spiking-specific two-photon Ca2+ imaging in proteolipid protein-immunized relapsing-remitting SJL/J mice in vivo. We identified the emergence of hyperactive cortical neurons in remission only, independent of direct immune-mediated damage and paralleled by elevated anxiety. High levels of neuronal activity were accompanied by increased caspase-3 expression. Cortical TNFα expression was mainly increased by excitatory neurons in remission; blockade with intraventricular infliximab restored AMPA spontaneous excitatory postsynaptic current frequencies, completely recovered normal neuronal network activity patterns and alleviated elevated anxiety. This suggests a dysregulation of cortical networks attempting to achieve functional compensation by synaptic plasticity mechanisms, indicating a link between immune attack and early start of neurodegeneration.
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