Purpose: Given the high incidence of refractory epilepsy, novel therapeutic approaches and concepts are urgently needed. To date, viral-mediated delivery and endogenous expression of antisense sequences as a strategy to prevent seizures have received little attention in epilepsy therapy development efforts. Here we validate adenosine kinase (ADK), the astrocyte-based key negative regulator of the brain's endogenous anticonvulsant adenosine, as a potential therapeutic target for antisense-mediated seizure suppression. Methods: Wedeveloped adenoassociated virus 8 (AAV8)-based gene therapy vectors to selectively modulate ADK expression in astrocytes. Cell type selectivity was achieved by expressing an Adk-cDNA in sense or antisense orientation under the control of an astrocyte-specific gfaABC1D promoter. Viral vectors where injected into the CA3 of wild-type mice or spontaneously epileptic Adk-tg transgenic mice that overexpress ADK in brain. After virus injection, ADK expression was assessed histologically and biochemically. In addition, intracranial electroencephalography (EEG) recordings were obtained. Key Findings: We demonstrate in wild-type mice that viral overexpression of ADK within astrocytes is sufficient to trigger spontaneous recurrent seizures in the absence of any other epileptogenic event, whereas ADK down-regulation via AAV8-mediated RNA interference almost completely abolished spontaneous recurrent seizures in Adk-tg mice. Significance: Our data demonstrate that modulation of astrocytic ADK expression can trigger or prevent seizures, respectively. This is the first study to use an antisense approach to validate ADK as a rational therapeutic target for the treatment of epilepsy and suggests that gene therapies based on the knock down of ADK might be a feasible approach to control seizures in refractory epilepsy. Wiley Periodicals, Inc. © 2010 International League Against Epilepsy.
CITATION STYLE
Theofilas, P., Brar, S., Stewart, K. A., Shen, H. Y., Sandau, U. S., Poulsen, D., & Boison, D. (2011). Adenosine kinase as a target for therapeutic antisense strategies in epilepsy. Epilepsia, 52(3), 589–601. https://doi.org/10.1111/j.1528-1167.2010.02947.x
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