Abstract

One of the challenges in treating patients with drug-resistant epilepsy is that the mechanisms of seizures are unknown. Most current interventions are based on the assumption that epileptic activity recruits neurons and progresses by synaptic transmission. However, several experimental studies have shown that neural activity in rodent hippocampi can propagate independently of synaptic transmission. Recent studies suggest these waves are self-propagating by electric field (ephaptic) coupling. In this study, we tested the hypothesis that neural recruitment during seizures can occur by electric field coupling. 4-Aminopyridine was used in both in vivo and in vitro preparation to trigger seizures or epileptiform activity. A transection was made in the in vivo hippocampus and in vitro hippocampal and cortical slices to study whether the induced seizure activity can recruit neurons across the gap. A computational model was built to test whether ephaptic coupling alone can account for neural recruitment across the transection. The model prediction was further validated by in vitro experiments. Experimental results show that electric fields generated by seizure-like activity in the hippocampus both in vitro and in vivo can recruit neurons locally and through a transection of the tissue. The computational model suggests that the neural recruitment across the transection is mediated by electric field coupling. With in vitro experiments, we show that a dielectric material can block the recruitment of epileptiform activity across a transection, and that the electric fields measured within the gap are similar to those predicted by model simulations. Furthermore, this nonsynaptic neural recruitment is also observed in cortical slices, suggesting that this effect is robust in brain tissue. These results indicate that ephaptic coupling, a nonsynaptic mechanism, can underlie neural recruitment by a small electric field generated by seizure activity and could explain the low success rate of surgical transections in epilepsy patients.

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