Abstract

Neuropathological studies often use autopsy brain tissue as controls to evaluate changes in protein or RNA levels in several diseases. In mesial temporal lobe epilepsy (MTLE), several genes are up or down regulated throughout the epileptogenic and chronic stages of the disease. Given that postmortem changes in several gene transcripts could impact the detection of changes in case-control studies, we evaluated the effect of using autopsy specimens with different postmortem intervals (PMI) on differential gene expression of the Pilocarpine (PILO)induced Status Epilepticus (SE) of MTLE. For this, we selected six genes (Gfap, Ppia, Gad65, Gad67, Npy, and Tnf-α) whose expression patterns in the hippocampus of PILO-injected rats are well known. Initially, we compared hippocampal expression of naïve rats whose hippocampi were harvested immediately after death (0h-PMI) with those harvested at 6h postmortem interval (6h-PMI): Npy and Ppia transcripts increased and Tnf-α transcripts decreased in the 6h-PMI group (p<0.05). We then investigated if these PMI-related changes in gene expression have the potential to adulterate or mask RT-qPCR results obtained with PILO-injected rats euthanized at acute or chronic phases. In the acute group, Npy transcript was significantly higher when compared with 0h-PMI rats, whereas Ppia transcript was lower than 6h-PMI group. When we used epileptic rats (chronic group), the RT-qPCR results showed higher Tnf-α only when compared to 6h-PMI group. In conclusion, our study demonstrates that PMI influences gene transcription and can mask changes in gene transcription seen during epileptogenesis in the PILO-SE model. Thus, to avoid erroneous conclusions, we strongly recommend that researchers account for changes in postmortem gene expression in their experimental design.

Highlights

  • Mesial temporal lobe epilepsy (MTLE) is a chronic disease characterized by spontaneous and recurrent seizures (SRS) [1]

  • We examined the influence of Postmortem hippocampi tissue can interfere with gene expression analysis of epileptogenic process different postmortem intervals (PMI) on real-time quantitative RT-PCR (RT-qPCR) results obtained from the hippocampi of PILO-injected rats

  • We clearly demonstrated that PMI can influence some gene transcript amounts and that this may be sufficient to mask changes the RT-qPCR results from PILO-injected rats

Read more

Summary

Introduction

Mesial temporal lobe epilepsy (MTLE) is a chronic disease characterized by spontaneous and recurrent seizures (SRS) [1]. Several strategies can be adopted to minimize these factors, including the use of numerous biological replicates in matched-pairs design for biological variances and the use of suitable normalizers for technical variations [17,18,19,20]. Recognition of these confounding effects is, essential for a robust experimental design

Results
Discussion
Conclusion
Full Text
Paper version not known

Talk to us

Join us for a 30 min session where you can share your feedback and ask us any queries you have

Schedule a call