Abstract

Epilepsy is a serious neurological disorder affecting around 70 million people globally and is characterized by spontaneous recurrent seizures. Recent evidence indicates that dysfunction in metabolic processes can lead to the alteration of neuronal and network excitability, thereby contributing to epileptogenesis. Developing a suitable animal model that can recapitulate all the clinical phenotypes of human metabolic epilepsy (ME) is crucial yet challenging. The specific environment of many symptoms as well as the primary state of the applicable neurobiology, genetics, and lack of valid biomarkers/diagnostic tests are the key factors that hinder the process of developing a suitable animal model. The present systematic review summarizes the current state of available animal models of metabolic dysfunction associated with epileptic disorders. A systematic search was performed by using the Preferred Reporting Items for Systematic Reviews and Meta-Analyses (PRISMA) model. A range of electronic databases, including google scholar, Springer, PubMed, ScienceDirect, and Scopus, were scanned between January 2000 and April 2020. Based on the selection criteria, 23 eligible articles were chosen and are discussed in the current review. Critical analysis of the selected literature delineated several available approaches that have been modeled into metabolic epilepsy and pointed out several drawbacks associated with the currently available models. The result describes available models of metabolic dysfunction associated with epileptic disorder, such as mitochondrial respiration deficits, Lafora disease (LD) model-altered glycogen metabolism, causing epilepsy, glucose transporter 1 (GLUT1) deficiency, adiponectin responsive seizures, phospholipid dysfunction, glutaric aciduria, mitochondrial disorders, pyruvate dehydrogenase (PDH) α-subunit gene (PDHA1), pyridoxine dependent epilepsy (PDE), BCL2-associated agonist of cell death (BAD), Kcna1 knock out (KO), and long noncoding RNAs (lncRNA) cancer susceptibility candidate 2 (lncRNA CASC2). Finally, the review highlights certain focus areas that may increase the possibilities of developing more suitable animal models and underscores the importance of the rationalization of animal models and evaluation methods for studying ME. The review also suggests the pressing need of developing precise robust animal models and evaluation methods for investigating ME.

Highlights

  • Metabolic abnormalities (ME) causing high brain activity are associated with an increased risk of epilepsy development in affected individuals

  • The development of a suitable and robust animal model that can mimic clinical phenotypes will be a noteworthy contribution in the domain of biomedical research

  • Different new gene editing techniques (CRISPR/CAS9) should be incorporated along with different analytical methods to find the basic molecular changes in the animal and human settings. This current study has systematically reviewed the available literature on experimental models that relate metabolic alterations due to epilepsy

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Summary

Introduction

Metabolic abnormalities (ME) causing high brain activity are associated with an increased risk of epilepsy development in affected individuals. ME is caused by an array of toxic or metabolic diseases, such as mitochondrial dysfunction, alteration of intracellular osmolytes, accumulation of toxic substances, and a decrease of substrates that are crucial for internal membrane function or cellular metabolism [1]. All these factors combined result in a compromised efficacy to supply energy in the brain area, leading to excitability of the neuronal cells and producing epileptic seizures [2]. Folinic acid responsive seizures are diagnosed as an increase in monoamine metabolite in CSF, their genetic cause remains elusive [13]. Neonatal epileptic encephalopathy might be a cause of folinic acid responsive seizures and is treatable as the patients with this type of seizures respond well to pyridoxine therapy [14]

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