Researchers redefine the mechanisms of Dravet syndrome
Recovery of normal signaling of a key brain cell may be a critical
therapeutic target to reduce seizures and cognitive impairment
Date:
March 29, 2022
Source:
Children's Hospital of Philadelphia
Summary:
Researchers have found that dysfunction in an important cell subtype
in the brain's neuronal network contribute to chronic symptoms in
the neurodevelopmental disorder Dravet syndrome.
FULL STORY ========================================================================== Researchers from Children's Hospital of Philadelphia (CHOP) have found
that dysfunction in an important cell subtype in the brain's neuronal
network contribute to chronic symptoms in the neurodevelopmental disorder Dravet syndrome. The findings were published today in the journal Cell
Reports.
========================================================================== Dravet syndrome is a form of genetic epilepsy that is characterized by
seizures that begin in the first year of life, along with differences in childhood development and features of autism spectrum disorder. Children
with Dravet syndrome are also at an increased chance of early death,
making proper diagnosis and treatment of the disorder critical. More
than 90% of children with Dravet syndrome have a pathogenic, or disease-causing, variant in the SCN1A gene, which makes the protein
Nav1.1, a sodium channel that is important for the activity of seizure-suppressing cells called interneurons and, in particular,
a subtype of interneuron called the parvalbumin interneuron.
"Dravet syndrome affects 1 in 14,000 children in the world and has a
profound impact on children and their families," said Ethan Goldberg, MD,
PhD, a pediatric neurologist and Director of the Epilepsy Neurogenetics Initiative (ENGIN) at CHOP and lead author of the study. "We can
model Dravet syndrome in the laboratory to understand precisely how
the loss of SCN1A produces the clinical features characteristic of the
disease to drive development of novel therapies, and, one day, a cure."
Prior work from the Goldberg lab showed that abnormal electrical activity
of these parvalbumin neurons in a preclinical experimental model of
Dravet syndrome was only transient, with these neurons recovering
normal activity in the chronic phase of the disorder. This created
a conundrum for the research community: why do patients with Dravet
syndrome continue to have seizures, cognitive impairment, and features
of autism spectrum disorder? In this study, the researchers developed
a method to assess parvalbumin interneuron function at two different
points in time. Early disease severity is caused by abnormalities in parvalbumin interneuron electrical activity, which allows neurons to
send a message to neighboring neurons. However, chronic dysfunction
was due instead to impaired synaptic transmission; while parvalbumin interneurons recovered the ability to generate electrical activity,
this activity did not spread down the nerve or "axon" to the synapse to
inhibit of other neurons, which is required for seizure suppression.
While more work is needed to translate this research into direct human applications, the researchers note that SCN1A may be a viable therapeutic target for Dravet syndrome patients, particularly if there are ways to
increase its expression in the axon to overcome impaired signaling and
synaptic transmission.
"A prediction of our work is that the success of therapies under
development may depend on the ability to increase expression of Nav1.1
at the parvalbumin interneuron axon," Goldberg said.
This study was supported by the Dravet Syndrome Foundation and the
National Institutes of Neurological Disorders and Stroke of the
National Institutes of Health under grants K08NS097633, R01NS110869,
and F31NS111803,
========================================================================== Story Source: Materials provided by
Children's_Hospital_of_Philadelphia. Note: Content may be edited for
style and length.
========================================================================== Journal Reference:
1. Kaneko et al. Developmentally-regulated impairment of parvalbumin
interneuron synaptic transmission in an experimental model of
Dravet syndrome. Cell Rep, 2022 [abstract] ==========================================================================
Link to news story:
https://www.sciencedaily.com/releases/2022/03/220329114655.htm
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