4.2 Review

The Role of the Persistent Sodium Current in Epilepsy

Journal

EPILEPSY CURRENTS
Volume 21, Issue 1, Pages 40-47

Publisher

SAGE PUBLICATIONS INC
DOI: 10.1177/1535759720973978

Keywords

voltage-gated sodium channels; persistent sodium current; epilepsy; epileptic encephalopathy; channelopathy; anti-seizure medication

Funding

  1. National Institutes of Health [R01NS103090, 1F31NS115451-01]

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Voltage-gated sodium channels play a crucial role in generating action potentials in the nervous system, with a persistent sodium current contributing to normal neuronal function but potentially playing a pathogenic role in epilepsy. Targeting the persistent sodium current may hold promise for developing novel anti-seizure medication strategies.
Voltage-gated sodium channels (VGSCs) are foundational to excitable cell function: Their coordinated passage of sodium ions into the cell is critical for the generation and propagation of action potentials throughout the nervous system. The classical paradigm of action potential physiology states that sodium passes through the membrane only transiently (1-2 milliseconds), before the channels inactivate and cease to conduct sodium ions. However, in reality, a small fraction of the total sodium current (1%-2%) remains at steady state despite prolonged depolarization. While this persistent sodium current (I-NaP) contributes to normal physiological functioning of neurons, accumulating evidence indicates a particularly pathogenic role for an elevated I-NaP in epilepsy (reviewed previously). Due to significant advances over the past decade of epilepsy research concerning the importance of I-NaP in sodium channelopathies, this review seeks to summarize recent evidence and highlight promising novel anti-seizure medication strategies through preferentially targeting I-NaP.

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