Abstract
The C57BL/6J mouse as a model of seizure/epilepsy is challenging due to high mortality and huge variability in response to kainate. We have recently demonstrated that repeated administration of a low dose of kainate by intraperitoneal route can induce severe status epilepticus (SE) with 94% survival rate. In the present study, based on continuous video-EEG recording for 4-18 weeks from epidurally implanted electrodes on the cortex, we demonstrate that this method also induces immediate epileptogenesis (<1-5 days post-SE). This finding was based on identification of two types of spontaneous recurrent seizures; behavioral convulsive seizures (CS) and electrographic nonconvulsive seizures (NCS). The identification of the spontaneous CS, stage 3-5 types, was based on the behaviors (video) that were associated with the EEG characteristics (stage 3-5 epileptiform spikes), the power spectrum, and the activity counts. The electrographic NCS identification was based on the stage 1-2 epileptiform spike clusters on the EEG and their associated power spectrum. Severe SE induced immediate epileptogenesis in all the mice. The maximum numbers of spontaneous CS were observed during the first 4-6 weeks of the SE and they decreased thereafter. Mild SE also induced immediate epileptogenesis in some mice but the CS were less frequent. In both the severe and the mild SE groups, the spontaneous electrographic NCS persisted throughout the 18 weeks observation period, and therefore this could serve as a chronic model for complex seizures. However, unlike rat kainate models, the C57BL/6J mouse kainate model is a unique regressive CS model of epilepsy. Further studies are required to understand the mechanism of recovery from spontaneous CS in this model, which could reveal novel therapeutic targets for epilepsy.
Highlights
Temporal lobe epilepsy (TLE) is the most common form of human epilepsy [1]
The severe status epilepticus (SE) group mice always had the stage-5 behavioral seizures that were characterized by generalized tonic clonic convulsions with lateral recumbence or jumping and/or wild running followed by generalized convulsions
The results of this study demonstrate that both severe and mild SE in C57BL/6J mice induce epileptogenesis soon after the SE
Summary
To understand the pathogenesis of human TLE, rodent models of epilepsy have been developed and characterized. Rat models (for example [5,6,7,8]) and some mouse models (for example [9, 10]) of TLE are well characterized and extensively studied. Several mouse models of epileptogenesis have been developed [19, 20], the C57BL/6J strain posed several challenges such as high mortality, inconsistent seizure response and resistance to kainate-induced neurotoxicity by the intraperitoneal (i.p.) route at a dose
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