Dampened hippocampal oscillations and enhanced spindel activity in an assymptomatic model of developmental cortical malformations
Loading...
Identifiers
Publication date
Authors
Advisors
Editors
Journal Title
Journal ISSN
Volume Title
Publisher
Abstract
Developmental cortical malformations comprise a large spectrum of histopathological
brain abnormalities and syndromes. Their genetic, developmental and clinical complexity
suggests they should be better understood in terms of the complementary action
of independently timed perturbations (i.e., the multiple-hit hypothesis). However,
understanding the underlying biological processes remains puzzling. Here we induced
developmental cortical malformations in offspring, after intraventricular injection of
methylazoxymethanol (MAM) in utero in mice. We combined extensive histological and
electrophysiological studies to characterize the model. We found that MAM injections
at E14 and E15 induced a range of cortical and hippocampal malformations resembling
histological alterations of specific genetic mutations and transplacental mitotoxic agent
injections. However, in contrast to most of these models, intraventricularly MAM-injected
mice remained asymptomatic and showed no clear epilepsy-related phenotype as tested
in long-term chronic recordings and with pharmacological manipulations. Instead, they
exhibited a non-specific reduction of hippocampal-related brain oscillations (mostly in
CA1); including theta, gamma and HFOs; and enhanced thalamocortical spindle activity
during non-REM sleep. These data suggest that developmental cortical malformations do
not necessarily correlate with epileptiform activity. We propose that the intraventricular
in utero MAM approach exhibiting a range of rhythmopathies is a suitable model for
multiple-hit studies of associated neurological disorders.
Description
UNESCO Subjects
Keywords
Bibliographic reference
Cid, E., Gómez-Domínguez, D., Martín-López, D., Gal-Iglesias, B., Laurent, F., Ibarz, J. M., ..., & Menéndez-Prida, L. (2014). Dampened hippocampal oscillations and enhanced spindle activity in an asymptomatic model of developmental cortical malformations. Frontiers in Systems Neuroscience, 8.







