4.7 Article

Amyloid β-Induced Neuronal Hyperexcitability Triggers Progressive Epilepsy

Journal

JOURNAL OF NEUROSCIENCE
Volume 29, Issue 11, Pages 3453-3462

Publisher

SOC NEUROSCIENCE
DOI: 10.1523/JNEUROSCI.5215-08.2009

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Funding

  1. Finnish Cultural Foundation
  2. Northern-Savonia Regional Funds
  3. Institut National de la Santeet de la Recherche Medicale
  4. Swedish Medical Research Council
  5. EMBO Young Investigator Programme
  6. Alzheimer's Association
  7. Alzheimer's Research Trust UK
  8. European Union Seventh Framework Program [HEALTH-F2-2007-201159]
  9. Academy of Finland
  10. Sigrid Juselius Foundation

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Alzheimer's disease is associated with an increased risk of unprovoked seizures. However, the underlying mechanisms of seizure induction remain elusive. Here, we performed video-EEG recordings in mice carrying mutant human APPswe and PS1dE9 genes (APdE9 mice) and their wild-type littermates to determine the prevalence of unprovoked seizures. In two recording episodes at the onset of amyloid beta (A beta) pathogenesis (3 and 4.5 months of age), at least one unprovoked seizure was detected in 65% of APdE9 mice, of which 46% had multiple seizures and 38% had a generalized seizure. None of the wild-type mice had seizures. In a subset of APdE9 mice, seizure phenotype was associated with a loss of calbindin-D28k immunoreactivity in dentate granular cells and ectopic expression of neuropeptide Y in mossy fibers. In APdE9 mice, persistently decreased resting membrane potential in neocortical layer 2/3 pyramidal cells and dentate granule cells underpinned increased network excitability as identified by patch-clamp electrophysiology. At stimulus strengths evoking single-component EPSPs in wild-type littermates, APdE9 mice exhibited decreased action potential threshold and burst firing of pyramidal cells. Bath application (1h) of A beta 1-42 or A beta 25-35 (proto-) fibrils but not oligomers induced significant membrane depolarization of pyramidal cells and increased the activity of excitatory cell populations as measured by extracellular field recordings in the juvenile rodent brain, confirming the pathogenic significance of bath-applied A beta(proto-) fibrils. Overall, these data identify fibrillar A beta as a pathogenic entity powerfully altering neuronal membrane properties such that hyperexcitability of pyramidal cells culminates in epileptiform activity.

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