4.7 Article

Apnea Associated with Brainstem Seizures in Cacna1aS218L Mice Is Caused by Medullary Spreading Depolarization

Journal

JOURNAL OF NEUROSCIENCE
Volume 39, Issue 48, Pages 9633-9644

Publisher

SOC NEUROSCIENCE
DOI: 10.1523/JNEUROSCI.1713-19.2019

Keywords

apnea; brainstem; channelopathy; oxygen; SUDEP; transgenic model

Categories

Funding

  1. Dutch National Epilepsy Foundation [2017-10]
  2. EU IAPP Program BRAINPATH [612360]
  3. EU Marie Curie Career Integration Grant [294233]
  4. CURE SUDEP research award [280560]

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Seizure-related apnea is common and can be lethal. Its mechanisms however remain unclear and preventive strategies are lacking. We postulate that brainstem spreading depolarization (SD), previously associated with lethal seizures in animal models, initiates apnea upon invasion of brainstem respiratory centers. To study this, we assessed effects of brainstem seizures on brainstem function and respiration in male and female mice carrying a homozygous S218L missense mutation that leads to gain-of-function of voltage-gated Ca(V)2.1 Ca2+ channels and high risk for fatal seizures. Recordings of brainstem DC potential and neuronal activity, cardiorespiratory activity and local tissue oxygen were performed in freely behaving animals. Brainstem SD occurred during all spontaneous fatal seizures and, unexpectedly, during a subset of nonfatal seizures. Seizure-related SDs in the ventrolateral medulla correlated with respiratory suppression. Seizures induced by stimulation of the inferior colliculus could evoke SD that spread in a rostrocaudal direction, preceding local tissue hypoxia and apnea, indicating that invasion of SD into medullary respiratory centers initiated apnea and hypoxia rather than vice versa. Fatal outcome was prevented by timely resuscitation. Moreover, NMDA receptor antagonists MK-801 and memantine prevented seizure-related SD and apnea, which supports brainstem SD as a prerequisite for brainstem seizure-related apnea in this animal model and has translational value for developing strategies that prevent fatal ictal apnea.

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