4.7 Article

Reclusive chandeliers: Functional isolation of dentate axo-axonic cells after experimental status epilepticus

Journal

PROGRESS IN NEUROBIOLOGY
Volume 231, Issue -, Pages -

Publisher

PERGAMON-ELSEVIER SCIENCE LTD
DOI: 10.1016/j.pneurobio.2023.102542

Keywords

Chandelier cell; Inhibition; Seizure; Dentate gyrus; GABA reversal; Granule cell; Epileptogenesis; Synapse

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Axo-axonic cells (AACs) in the dentate area play a crucial role in regulating network output and synchrony. In epilepsy, these cells undergo structural alterations, resulting in changes in their firing properties and reduced ability to respond to network activity. These early post-epileptic changes in AAC physiology can compromise their function in controlling network activity in the dentate area.
Axo-axonic cells (AACs) provide specialized inhibition to the axon initial segment (AIS) of excitatory neurons and can regulate network output and synchrony. Although hippocampal dentate AACs are structurally altered in epilepsy, physiological analyses of dentate AACs are lacking. We demonstrate that parvalbumin neurons in the dentate molecular layer express PTHLH, an AAC marker, and exhibit morphology characteristic of AACs. Dentate AACs show high-frequency, non-adapting firing but lack persistent firing in the absence of input and have higher rheobase than basket cells suggesting that AACs can respond reliably to network activity. Early after pilocarpineinduced status epilepticus (SE), dentate AACs receive fewer spontaneous excitatory and inhibitory synaptic inputs and have significantly lower maximum firing frequency. Paired recordings and spatially localized optogenetic stimulation revealed that SE reduced the amplitude of unitary synaptic inputs from AACs to granule cells without altering reliability, short-term plasticity, or AIS GABA reversal potential. These changes compromised AAC-dependent shunting of granule cell firing in a multicompartmental model. These early post-SE changes in AAC physiology would limit their ability to receive and respond to input, undermining a critical brake on the dentate throughput during epileptogenesis.

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