Pathological Networks Involving Dysmorphic Neurons in Type II Focal Cortical Dysplasia.
Yijie ShaoQianqian GeJiachao YangMi WangYu ZhouJin-Xin GuoMengyue ZhuJiachen ShiYiqi HuLi ShenZhong ChenXiao-Ming LiJun-Ming ZhuJianmin ZhangShumin DuanJiadong ChenPublished in: Neuroscience bulletin (2022)
Focal cortical dysplasia (FCD) is one of the most common causes of drug-resistant epilepsy. Dysmorphic neurons are the major histopathological feature of type II FCD, but their role in seizure genesis in FCD is unclear. Here we performed whole-cell patch-clamp recording and morphological reconstruction of cortical principal neurons in postsurgical brain tissue from drug-resistant epilepsy patients. Quantitative analyses revealed distinct morphological and electrophysiological characteristics of the upper layer dysmorphic neurons in type II FCD, including an enlarged soma, aberrant dendritic arbors, increased current injection for rheobase action potential firing, and reduced action potential firing frequency. Intriguingly, the upper layer dysmorphic neurons received decreased glutamatergic and increased GABAergic synaptic inputs that were coupled with upregulation of the Na + -K + -Cl - cotransporter. In addition, we found a depolarizing shift of the GABA reversal potential in the CamKII-cre::PTEN flox/flox mouse model of drug-resistant epilepsy, suggesting that enhanced GABAergic inputs might depolarize dysmorphic neurons. Thus, imbalance of synaptic excitation and inhibition of dysmorphic neurons may contribute to seizure genesis in type II FCD.
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