Neuroactive steroids and GABAA receptor plasticity in the brain of the WAG/Rij rat, a model of absence epilepsy

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Abstract

The role of neuroactive steroids and GABAA receptors in the generation of spontaneous spike-and-wave discharges (SWDs) was investigated in the WAG/Rij rat model of absence epilepsy. The plasma, cerebrocortical, and thalamic concentrations of the progesterone metabolite 3α-hydroxy- 5α-pregnan-20-one (3α,5α-TH PROG) were increased in the WAG/Rij rat at 2 months of age compared with those in control (Wistar) rats. In contrast, the brain and peripheral levels of 3α,5α- tetrahydrodeoxycorticosterone (3α,5α-TH DOC) did not differ between the two rat strains at this age. At 6 months of age, when absence epilepsy worsens in WAG/Rij rats, the plasma concentration of 3α,5α-TH PROG remained high whereas that of 3α,5α-TH DOC had increased, the cerebrocortical levels of both 3α,5α-TH PROG and 3α,5α-TH DOC had increased, and the thalamic concentrations of these metabolites had decreased. At 6 months of age the expression of the α4 and δ subunits of the GABAA receptor in relay nuclei was increased. Finally, chronic stress induced by social isolation elicited a reduction in the amount of 3α,5α-TH PROG in the thalamus of 2-month-old WAG/Rij rats that was associated with a reduction in the number and overall duration of SWDs at 6 months of age. Absence epilepsy in the WAG/Rij rat is thus associated with changes in the abundance of neuroactive steroids and in the expression of specific GABAA receptor subunits in the thalamus, a brain area key to the pathophysiology of this condition. © 2008 The Authors.

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Pisu, M. G., Mostallino, M. C., Dore, R., Mura, M. L., Maciocco, E., Russo, E., … Serra, M. (2008). Neuroactive steroids and GABAA receptor plasticity in the brain of the WAG/Rij rat, a model of absence epilepsy. Journal of Neurochemistry, 106(6), 2502–2514. https://doi.org/10.1111/j.1471-4159.2008.05538.x

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