Slower, Fewer Hippocampal Ripples in Loss-of-Function Model of Dravet Syndrome

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Abstract

Impairment of Sharp-Wave Ripples in a Murine Model of Dravet Syndrome Cheah CS, Lundstrom BN, Catterall WA, Oakley JC. J Neurosci. 2019;39(46):9251-9260. doi:10.1523/JNEUROSCI.0890-19 Dravet syndrome (DS) is a severe early-onset epilepsy associated with heterozygous loss-of-function mutations in SCN1A. Animal models of DS with global Scn1a haploinsufficiency recapitulate the DS phenotype, including seizures, premature death, and impaired spatial memory performance. Spatial memory requires hippocampal sharp-wave ripples (SPW-Rs), which consist of high-frequency field potential oscillations (ripples, 100-260 Hz) superimposed on a slower SPW. Published in vitro electrophysiologic recordings in DS mice demonstrate reduced firing of GABAergic inhibitory neurons, which are essential for the formation of SPW-R complexes. Here, in vivo electrophysiologic recordings of hippocampal local field potential in both male and female mice demonstrate that Scn1a haploinsufficiency slows intrinsic ripple frequency and reduces the rate of SPW-R occurrence. In DS mice, peak ripple-band power is shifted to lower frequencies, average intertrough intervals of individually detected ripples are slower, and the rate of SPW-R generation is reduced, while SPW amplitude remains unaffected. These alterations in SPW-R properties, in combination with published reductions in interneuron function in DS, suggest a direct link between reduced inhibitory neuron excitability and impaired SPW-R function. A simple interconnected, conductance-based in silico interneuron network model was used to determine whether reduced sodium conductance is sufficient to slow ripple frequency, and stimulation with a modeled SPW demonstrates that reduced sodium conductance alone is sufficient to slow oscillatory frequencies. These findings forge a potential mechanistic link between impaired SPW-R generation and Scn1a mutation in DS mice, expanding the set of disorders in which SPW-R dysfunction contributes to impaired memory.

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Ahmed, O. J. (2020). Slower, Fewer Hippocampal Ripples in Loss-of-Function Model of Dravet Syndrome. Epilepsy Currents, 20(6), 387–389. https://doi.org/10.1177/1535759720960470

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