4.7 Article

Distinct behavioral phenotypes in novel fast kindling-susceptible and slow kindling-resistant rat strains selected by stimulation of the hippocampal perforant path

Journal

NEUROBIOLOGY OF DISEASE
Volume 85, Issue -, Pages 122-129

Publisher

ACADEMIC PRESS INC ELSEVIER SCIENCE
DOI: 10.1016/j.nbd.2015.10.008

Keywords

Hippocampus; Perforant path; Seizures; Epilepsy; Genetic background; Learning; Memory; Water maze; Open field; Fear conditioning

Categories

Funding

  1. NINDS [RO1 25020]
  2. Department of Defense Hypothesis Development Award [DR080424]

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Kindling is a phenomenon of activity-dependent neural circuit plasticity induced by repeated seizures that results in progressive permanent increases in susceptibility to epilepsy. As the permanent structural and functional modifications induced by kindling include a diverse range of molecular, cellular, and functional alterations in neural circuits, it is of interest to determine if genetic background associated with seizure-induced plasticity might also influence plasticity in neural circuitry underlying other behaviors. Outbred Sprague-Dawley (SD) rats were selected and bred for similar to 15 generations for fast' or slow rates of kindling development in response to stimulation of the perforant path input to the hippocampus. After 7-8 generations of selection and breeding, consistent phenotypes of fast and slow kindling rates were observed. By the 15th generation fast kindling rats referred to as Perforant Path Kindling Susceptible (PPKS) rats demonstrated a kindling rate of 10.7 +/- 1.1 afterdischarges (ADs) to the milestone of the first secondary generalized (Class V) seizure, which differed significantly from slow kindling Perforant Path Kindling Resistant (PPKR) rats requiring 25.5 +/- 2.0 ADs, and outbred SD rats requiring 16.8 +/- 2.5 ADs (p < 0.001, ANOVA). Seizure-naive adult PPKS and PPKR rats from offspring of this generation and age-matched adult outbred SD rats were compared in validated behavioral measures including the open field test as a measure of exploratory activity, the Morris water maze as a measure of hippocampal spatial memory, and fear conditioning as a behavioral paradigm of associative fear learning. The PPKS (fast kindling) strain with increased susceptibility to seizure-induced plasticity demonstrated statistically significant increases in motor exploratory activity in the open field test and reduced spatial learning the Morris water maze, but demonstrated normal fear conditioned learning comparable to outbred SD rats and the slow kindling-resistant PPKR strain. These results confirm that selection and breeding on the basis of responses to repeated pathway activation by stimulation can produce enduring modification of genetic background influencing behavior. These observations also suggest that genetic background underlying susceptibility or resistance to seizure-induced plasticity in hippocampal circuitry also differentially influences distinct behaviors and learning that depend on circuitry activated by the kindling selection process, and may have implications for associations between epilepsy, comorbid behavioral conditions, and cognition. (C) 2015 Elsevier Inc. All rights reserved.

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