4.6 Article

Seizure-mediated iron accumulation and dysregulated iron metabolism after status epilepticus and in temporal lobe epilepsy

Journal

ACTA NEUROPATHOLOGICA
Volume 142, Issue 4, Pages 729-759

Publisher

SPRINGER
DOI: 10.1007/s00401-021-02348-6

Keywords

Iron; Glutathione metabolism; Status epilepticus; Temporal lobe epilepsy with hippocampal sclerosis; Astrocytes

Funding

  1. European Union [602391, 602102]
  2. Dutch Epilepsy Foundation [16-05, 20-11, 20-02]
  3. European Union's Horizon 2020 research and innovation program under the Marie Sklodowska-Curie grant [722053]
  4. European Union's Horizon 2020 research and innovation program [952455]
  5. ZonMw, Programme Translational Research [95105004]
  6. Istituto Pasteur Italia - Fondazione Cenci Bolognetti

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Neuronal dysfunction caused by iron accumulation and reactive oxygen species may play a significant role in the epileptogenic process, while alterations in iron metabolism in the epileptic brain have not been extensively studied. Through clinical and animal experiments, as well as in vitro cell culture, the study revealed the mechanisms of iron in epilepsy pathology and antioxidant metabolism.
Neuronal dysfunction due to iron accumulation in conjunction with reactive oxygen species (ROS) could represent an important, yet underappreciated, component of the epileptogenic process. However, to date, alterations in iron metabolism in the epileptogenic brain have not been addressed in detail. Iron-related neuropathology and antioxidant metabolic processes were investigated in resected brain tissue from patients with temporal lobe epilepsy and hippocampal sclerosis (TLE-HS), post-mortem brain tissue from patients who died after status epilepticus (SE) as well as brain tissue from the electrically induced SE rat model of TLE. Magnetic susceptibility of the presumed seizure-onset zone from three patients with focal epilepsy was compared during and after seizure activity. Finally, the cellular effects of iron overload were studied in vitro using an acute mouse hippocampal slice preparation and cultured human fetal astrocytes. While iron-accumulating neurons had a pyknotic morphology, astrocytes appeared to acquire iron-sequestrating capacity as indicated by prominent ferritin expression and iron retention in the hippocampus of patients with SE or TLE. Interictal to postictal comparison revealed increased magnetic susceptibility in the seizure-onset zone of epilepsy patients. Post-SE rats had consistently higher hippocampal iron levels during the acute and chronic phase (when spontaneous recurrent seizures are evident). In vitro, in acute slices that were exposed to iron, neurons readily took up iron, which was exacerbated by induced epileptiform activity. Human astrocyte cultures challenged with iron and ROS increased their antioxidant and iron-binding capacity, but simultaneously developed a pro-inflammatory phenotype upon chronic exposure. These data suggest that seizure-mediated, chronic neuronal iron uptake might play a role in neuronal dysfunction/loss in TLE-HS. On the other hand, astrocytes sequester iron, specifically in chronic epilepsy. This function might transform astrocytes into a highly resistant, pro-inflammatory phenotype potentially contributing to pro-epileptogenic inflammatory processes.

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