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The Impact of Glutamatergic Synapse Dysfunction in the Corticothalamocortical Network on Absence Seizure Generation

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FRONTIERS MEDIA SA
DOI: 10.3389/fnmol.2022.836255

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AMPA receptors; excitatory synapses; feed-forward inhibition; absence epilepsy; corticothalamocortical network; DREADD technology

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Childhood absence epilepsy (CAE) is the most common pediatric epilepsy and is genetic in origin. Dysfunction in the corticothalamocortical (CTC) circuitry and deficits in AMPA receptor-mediated excitation of feed-forward inhibition (FFI) can lead to absence seizure generation. The stargazer mouse model and mutations in the Gria4 gene are discussed as examples of how glutamatergic synapse dysfunction contributes to CAE pathogenesis.
Childhood absence epilepsy (CAE) is the most common pediatric epilepsy affecting 10-18% of all children with epilepsy. It is genetic in origin and the result of dysfunction within the corticothalamocortical (CTC) circuitry. Network dysfunction may arise from multifactorial mechanisms in patients from different genetic backgrounds and thus account for the variability in patient response to currently available anti-epileptic drugs; 30% of children with absence seizures are pharmaco-resistant. This review considers the impact of deficits in AMPA receptor-mediated excitation of feed-forward inhibition (FFI) in the CTC, on absence seizure generation. AMPA receptors are glutamate activated ion channels and are responsible for most of the fast excitatory synaptic transmission throughout the CNS. In the stargazer mouse model of absence epilepsy, the genetic mutation is in stargazin, a transmembrane AMPA receptor trafficking protein (TARP). This leads to a defect in AMPA receptor insertion into synapses in parvalbumin-containing (PV+) inhibitory interneurons in the somatosensory cortex and thalamus. Mutation in the Gria4 gene, which encodes for the AMPA receptor subunit GluA4, the predominant AMPA receptor subunit in cortical and thalamic PV + interneurons, also leads to absence seizures. This review explores the impact of glutamatergic synapse dysfunction in the CTC network on absence seizure generation. It also discusses the cellular and molecular mechanisms involved in the pathogenesis of childhood absence epilepsy.

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