Abstract

Stress is the most frequently self-reported seizure precipitant in patients with epilepsy. Moreover, a relation between ear stress and epilepsy has been suggested. Although ear stress and stress hormones are known to influence seizure threshold in rodents, effects on the development of epilepsy (epileptogenesis) are still unclear. Therefore, we studied the consequences of ear corticosteroid exposure for epileptogenesis, under highly controlled conditions in an animal model. Experimental febrile seizures (eFS) were elicited in 10-day-old mice by warm-air induced hyperthermia, while a control group was exposed to a normothermic condition. In the following 2 weeks, mice received either seven corticosterone or vehicle injections or were left undisturbed. Specific measures indicative for epileptogenesis were examined at 25 days of age and compared with vehicle injected or untreated mice. We examined structural [neurogenesis, dendritic morphology, and mossy fiber sprouting (MFS)] and functional (glutamatergic postsynaptic currents and long-term potentiation) plasticity in the dentate gyrus (DG). We found that differences in DG morphology induced by eFS were aggravated by repetitive (mildly stressful) vehicle injections and corticosterone exposure. In the injected groups, eFS were associated with decreases in neurogenesis, and increases in cell proliferation, dendritic length, and spine density. No group differences were found in MFS. Despite these changes in DG morphology, no effects of eFS were found on functional plasticity. We conclude that corticosterone exposure during early epileptogenesis elicited by eFS aggravates morphological, but not functional, changes in the DG, which partly supports the hypothesis that ear stress stimulates epileptogenesis.

Highlights

  • Epilepsy is a common neurological disorder, especially in childhood where its prevalence is as high as 0.5–1.0% [1]

  • To improve insight into the impact of stress hormones on epileptogenesis, we studied the effects of corticosterone, an important stress hormone, during early-life epileptogenesis on neuronal morphology and functional plasticity in the rodent brain

  • We examined alterations in morphological and functional parameters in the dentate gyrus (DG), a hippocampal subarea that is affected by Experimental febrile seizures (eFS) [24,25,26,27,28] as well as stress hormones [29]

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Summary

Introduction

Epilepsy is a common neurological disorder, especially in childhood where its prevalence is as high as 0.5–1.0% [1]. An important factor influencing epilepsy and epileptic seizures is stress, which is the most frequently self-reported seizure precipitant in patients with epilepsy [reviewed in Ref. The seizure precipitating effects of stress are confirmed by prospective studies [3,4,5,6,7]. Besides direct effects on seizure susceptibility, stress can influence the risk of being diagnosed with epilepsy later in life [8,9,10]. Associations between stress and epilepsy exist on multiple levels. The mechanisms behind these relations are so far poorly understood

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