Synaptic alterations and neuronal firing in human epileptic neocortical excitatory networks

Bod, Réka [Bod, Réka (Idegtudományok), author] School of PhD Studies (SU); Tóth, Kinga* [Tóth, Kinga (Neurobiológia), author] Integratív Idegtudományi Kutatócsoport (KPI); Essam, Nour [ESSAM Fawzy Ahmed Aly, Nour (Neuroscience/ epi...), author] Integratív Idegtudományi Kutatócsoport (KPI); Tóth, Estilla Zsófia [Tóth, Estilla Zsófia (neurobiológia), author] School of PhD Studies (SU); Erõss, Loránd [Erőss, Loránd (Idegsebészet, ide...), author] Országos Mentális, Ideggyógyászati és Idegsebés...; Institute of Neurology and Neurosurgery (Amerik... (OMIII); Entz, László [Entz, László (Idegsebészet), author] Országos Mentális, Ideggyógyászati és Idegsebés...; Bagó, Attila G. [Bagó, Attila György (Idegsebészet), author] Országos Mentális, Ideggyógyászati és Idegsebés...; Fabó, Dániel [Fabó, Dániel (Neurobiológia), author] Országos Mentális, Ideggyógyászati és Idegsebés...; Institute of Neurology and Neurosurgery (Amerik... (OMIII); Ulbert, István** [Ulbert, István (Idegtudományok), author] Információs Technológiai és Bionikai Kar (PPCU); Országos Mentális, Ideggyógyászati és Idegsebés...; Wittner, Lucia ✉ [Wittner, Lucia (Idegtudomány), author] School of PhD Studies (SU); Országos Mentális, Ideggyógyászati és Idegsebés...

English Article (Journal Article) Scientific
Published: FRONTIERS IN SYNAPTIC NEUROSCIENCE 1663-3563 1663-3563 15 Paper: 1233569 , 22 p. 2023
  • SJR Scopus - Cellular and Molecular Neuroscience: Q1
Identifiers
Fundings:
  • (K137886)
  • (NAP2022-I-8/2022)
  • (Semmelweis 250+ Excellence Scholarship)
  • Nemzeti Gyógyszerkutatási és Fejlesztési Laboratórium (PharmaLab)(RRF-2.3.1-21-2022-00015) Funder: NRDIO
Epilepsy is a prevalent neurological condition, with underlying neuronal mechanisms involving hyperexcitability and hypersynchrony. Imbalance between excitatory and inhibitory circuits, as well as histological reorganization are relatively well-documented in animal models or even in the human hippocampus, but less is known about human neocortical epileptic activity. Our knowledge about changes in the excitatory signaling is especially scarce, compared to that about the inhibitory cell population. This study investigated the firing properties of single neurons in the human neocortex in vitro , during pharmacological blockade of glutamate receptors, and additionally evaluated anatomical changes in the excitatory circuit in tissue samples from epileptic and non-epileptic patients. Both epileptic and non-epileptic tissues exhibited spontaneous population activity (SPA), NMDA receptor antagonization reduced SPA recurrence only in epileptic tissue, whereas further blockade of AMPA/kainate receptors reversibly abolished SPA emergence regardless of epilepsy. Firing rates did not significantly change in excitatory principal cells and inhibitory interneurons during pharmacological experiments. Granular layer (L4) neurons showed an increased firing rate in epileptic compared to non-epileptic tissue. The burstiness of neurons remained unchanged, except for that of inhibitory cells in epileptic recordings, which decreased during blockade of glutamate receptors. Crosscorrelograms computed from single neuron discharge revealed both mono- and polysynaptic connections, particularly involving intrinsically bursting principal cells. Histological investigations found similar densities of SMI-32-immunopositive long-range projecting pyramidal cells in both groups, and shorter excitatory synaptic active zones with a higher proportion of perforated synapses in the epileptic group. These findings provide insights into epileptic modifications from the perspective of the excitatory system and highlight discrete alterations in firing patterns and synaptic structure. Our data suggest that NMDA-dependent glutamatergic signaling, as well as the excitatory synaptic machinery are perturbed in epilepsy, which might contribute to epileptic activity in the human neocortex.
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2025-04-01 23:56