4.8 Article

Non-canonical glutamate signaling in a genetic model of migraine with aura

期刊

NEURON
卷 109, 期 4, 页码 -

出版社

CELL PRESS
DOI: 10.1016/j.neuron.2020.11.018

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资金

  1. National Institutes of Health, United States [R01 NS085413, NS102978, F31 NS105531, R01 NS106901, P20 GM109089, T32 HL007736]
  2. National Science Foundation, United States GRFP
  3. Telethon Foundation, Italy [TI-GGP14234, PRIN 2017ANP5L8, PRIN 2010JFYFY2_006, PRIN 2015H4K2CR, PSA PJ040046_2018]

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A study on mice with familial hemiplegic migraine type 2 (FHM2) mutation found slower clearance during sensory processing and spontaneous plumes of glutamate. These plumes, predicted by elevated basal glutamate levels and plume frequency, provide a novel mechanism for migraine with aura onset.
Migraine with aura is a common but poorly understood sensory circuit disorder. Monogenic models allow an opportunity to investigate its mechanisms, including spreading depolarization (SD), the phenomenon underlying migraine aura. Using fluorescent glutamate imaging, we show that awake mice carrying a familial hemiplegic migraine type 2 (FHM2) mutation have slower clearance during sensory processing, as well as previously undescribed spontaneous plumes of glutamate. Glutamatergic plumes overlapped anatomically with a reduced density of GLT-1a-positive astrocyte processes and were mimicked in wild-type animals by inhibiting glutamate clearance. Plume pharmacology and plume-like neural Ca2+ events were consistent with action-potential-independent spontaneous glutamate release, suggesting plumes are a consequence of inefficient clearance following synaptic release. Importantly, a rise in basal glutamate and plume frequency predicted the onset of SD in both FHM2 and wild-type mice, providing a novel mechanism in migraine with aura and, by extension, the other neurological disorders where SD occurs.

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