4.6 Article

Ca2+ Signals in Astrocytes Facilitate Spread of Epileptiform Activity

Journal

CEREBRAL CORTEX
Volume 28, Issue 11, Pages 4036-4048

Publisher

OXFORD UNIV PRESS INC
DOI: 10.1093/cercor/bhy196

Keywords

calcium signaling; epilepsy; glia; hippocampus; IP3R2; seizure; 2-photon

Categories

Funding

  1. South-East Health Region of Norway [2013021]
  2. Research Council of Norway [249988, 240476]
  3. Olav Thon Foundation
  4. Letten Foundation
  5. Max Planck Institute for Medical Research [SFB 1134/B01]
  6. European Commission, ERA-NET NEURON, Brain Inflammation, Glia and Epilepsy

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Epileptic seizures are associated with increased astrocytic Ca2+ signaling, but the fine spatiotemporal kinetics of the ictal astrocyte-neuron interplay remains elusive. By using 2-photon imaging of awake head-fixed mice with chronic hippocampal windows we demonstrate that astrocytic Ca2+ signals precede neuronal Ca2+ elevations during the initial bout of kainate-induced seizures. On average, astrocytic Ca-2+ elevations preceded neuronal activity in CA1 by about 8 s. In subsequent bouts of epileptic seizures, astrocytes and neurons were activated simultaneously. The initial astrocytic Ca2+ elevation was abolished in mice lacking the type 2 inositol-1,4,5-trisphosphate-receptor (Itpr(2-/-)). Furthermore, we found that Itpr(2-/-) mice exhibited 60% less epileptiform activity compared with wild-type mice when assessed by telemetric EEG monitoring. In both genotypes we also demonstrate that spreading depression waves may play a part in seizure termination. Our findings imply a role for astrocytic Ca2+ signals in ictogenesis.

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