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Title: Sharp-Wave Ripple Frequency and Interictal Epileptic Discharges Increase in Tandem During Thermal Induction of Seizures in a Mouse Model of Genetic Epilepsy. Author: Cheah CS, Beckman MA, Catterall WA, Oakley JC. Journal: Front Cell Neurosci; 2021; 15():751762. PubMed ID: 34733140. Abstract: Dravet Syndrome (DS) is a genetic, infantile-onset epilepsy with refractory seizures and severe cognitive impairment. While network level pathophysiology is poorly understood, work in genetic mouse models of DS reveals selective reduction of inhibitory interneuron excitability, a likely mechanism of seizures and comorbidities. Consistent with the critical role of interneurons in timing and recruitment of network activity, hippocampal sharp wave ripples (SPW-R)-interneuron dependent compound brain rhythms essential for spatial learning and memory-are less frequent and ripple frequency is slower in DS mice, both likely to impair cognitive performance. Febrile seizures are characteristic of DS, reflecting a temperature-dependent shift in excitation-inhibition balance. DS interneurons are sensitive to depolarization block and may fall silent with increased excitation precipitating epileptic transformation of ripples. To determine the temperature dependence of SWP-R features and relationship of SPW-R to hippocampal interictal activity, we recorded hippocampal local field potentials in a DS mouse model and wildtype littermate controls while increasing core body temperature. In both genotypes, temperature elevation speeds ripple frequency, although DS ripples remain consistently slower. The rate of SPW-R also increases in both genotypes but subsequently falls in DS mice as interictal epileptic activity simultaneously increases preceding a thermally-evoked seizure. Epileptic events occur intermixed with SPW-R, some during SPW-R burst complexes, and transiently suppress SPW-R occurrence suggesting shared network elements. Together these data demonstrate a temperature dependence of SPW-R rate and ripple frequency and suggest a pathophysiologic mechanism by which elevated temperature transforms a normal brain rhythm into epileptic event.[Abstract] [Full Text] [Related] [New Search]