A role for intracellular zinc in glioma alteration of neuronal chloride equilibrium

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Abstract

Glioma patients commonly suffer from epileptic seizures. However, the mechanisms of glioma-associated epilepsy are far to be completely understood. Using glioma-neurons co-cultures, we found that tumor cells are able to deeply influence neuronal chloride homeostasis, by depolarizing the reversal potential of ?-aminobutyric acid (GABA)-evoked currents (EGABA). EGABA depolarizing shift is due to zinc-dependent reduction of neuronal KCC2 activity and requires glutamate release from glioma cells. Consistently, intracellular zinc loading rapidly depolarizes EGABA in mouse hippocampal neurons, through the Src/Trk pathway and this effect is promptly reverted upon zinc chelation. This study provides a possible molecular mechanism linking glioma invasion to excitation/inhibition imbalance and epileptic seizures, through the zinc-mediated disruption of neuronal chloride homeostasis.

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Di Angelantonio, S., Murana, E., Cocco, S., Scala, F., Bertollini, C., Molinari, M. G., … Ragozzino, D. (2014). A role for intracellular zinc in glioma alteration of neuronal chloride equilibrium. Cell Death and Disease, 5(10). https://doi.org/10.1038/cddis.2014.437

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