RESUMO
OBJECTIVE: Animal and human studies have shown that the seizure-generating region is vastly dependent on distant neuronal hubs that can decrease duration and propagation of ongoing seizures. However, we still lack a comprehensive understanding of the impact of distant brain areas on specific interictal and ictal epileptic activities (e.g., isolated spikes, spike trains, seizures). Such knowledge is critically needed, because all kinds of epileptic activities are not equivalent in terms of clinical expression and impact on the progression of the disease. METHODS: We used surface high-density electroencephalography and multisite intracortical recordings, combined with pharmacological silencing of specific brain regions in the well-known kainate mouse model of temporal lobe epilepsy. We tested the impact of selective regional silencing on the generation of epileptic activities within a continuum ranging from very transient to more sustained and long-lasting discharges reminiscent of seizures. RESULTS: Silencing the contralateral hippocampus completely suppresses sustained ictal activities in the focus, as efficiently as silencing the focus itself, but whereas focus silencing abolishes all focus activities, contralateral silencing fails to control transient spikes. In parallel, we observed that sustained focus epileptiform discharges in the focus are preceded by contralateral firing and more strongly phase-locked to bihippocampal delta/theta oscillations than transient spiking activities, reinforcing the presumed dominant role of the contralateral hippocampus in promoting long-lasting, but not transient, epileptic activities. SIGNIFICANCE: Altogether, our work provides suggestive evidence that the contralateral hippocampus is necessary for the interictal to ictal state transition and proposes that crosstalk between contralateral neuronal activity and ipsilateral delta/theta oscillation could be a candidate mechanism underlying the progression from short- to long-lasting epileptic activities.
Assuntos
Modelos Animais de Doenças , Eletroencefalografia , Epilepsia do Lobo Temporal , Hipocampo , Ácido Caínico , Animais , Epilepsia do Lobo Temporal/fisiopatologia , Epilepsia do Lobo Temporal/induzido quimicamente , Camundongos , Hipocampo/fisiopatologia , Masculino , Camundongos Endogâmicos C57BL , Lateralidade Funcional/fisiologia , Convulsões/fisiopatologia , Convulsões/induzido quimicamenteRESUMO
Studying the development of brain network disruptions in epilepsy is challenged by the paucity of data before epilepsy onset. Here, we used the unilateral, kainate mouse model of hippocampal epilepsy to investigate brain network changes before and after epilepsy onset and their stability across time. Using 32 epicranial electrodes distributed over the mouse hemispheres, we analyzed EEG epochs free from epileptic activity in 15 animals before and 28 days after hippocampal injection (group 1) and in 20 animals on two consecutive days (d28 and d29, group 2). Statistical dependencies between electrodes were characterized with the debiased-weighted phase lag index. We analyzed: a) graph metric changes from baseline to chronic stage (d28) in group 1; b) their reliability across d28 and d29, in group 2; c) their correlation with epileptic activity (EA: seizure, spike and fast-ripple rates), averaged over d28 and d29, in group 2. During the chronic stage, intra-hemispheric connections of the non-injected hemisphere strengthened, yielding an asymmetrical network in low (4-8 Hz) and high theta (8-12 Hz) bands. The contralateral hemisphere also became more integrated and segregated within the high theta band. Both network topology and EEG markers of EA were stable over consecutive days but not correlated with each other. Altogether, we show reproducible large-scale network modifications after the development of focal epilepsy. These modifications are mostly specific to the non-injected hemisphere. The absence of correlation with epileptic activity does not allow to specifically ascribe these network changes to mechanisms supporting EA or rather compensatory inhibition but supports the notion that epilepsy extends beyond the sole repetition of EA and impacts network that might not be involved in EA generation.