Hoffmann Katrin, Czapp Marion, Löscher Wolfgang
Department of Pharmacology, Toxicology, and Pharmacy, University of Veterinary Medicine Hannover, and Center for Systems Neuroscience, Bünteweg 17, D-30559 Hannover, Germany.
Epilepsy Res. 2008 Oct;81(2-3):107-13. doi: 10.1016/j.eplepsyres.2008.04.019. Epub 2008 Jun 5.
Valproic acid (VPA) is a major antiepileptic drug (AED) with efficacy against multiple seizure types. It has a rapid onset of action but its anticonvulsant activity increases during prolonged treatment, which cannot be explained by drug or metabolite accumulation in plasma or brain. Among numerous other effects on diverse drug targets, VPA is an inhibitor of histone deacetylases (HDACs) that are involved in modulation of gene expression. The functional consequences of HDAC inhibition typically develop slowly during treatment with HDAC inhibitors such as VPA. We therefore hypothesized that inhibition of brain HDACs by VPA and resultant increases in gene expression could explain the increase in anticonvulsant activity during prolonged treatment with this drug. This hypothesis was tested by comparing the effects of VPA and the selective HDAC inhibitor, trichostatin A (TSA), in a mouse model of generalized seizures. Intravenous infusion of pentylenetetrazole (PTZ) was used to determine the effects of the drugs on different seizure types, i.e., myoclonic, clonic and tonic seizures. VPA (200mg/kg b.i.d.) rapidly increased PTZ thresholds to all seizure types, but this effect increased up to threefold during prolonged treatment. Following low (0.5mg/kg b.i.d.) or high (5mg/kg b.i.d.) dose treatment with TSA, no dose-dependent anticonvulsant effects were determined. This finding argues against a role of HDAC inhibition for the anticonvulsant activity of VPA. In view of the multiple extra- and intracellular targets of VPA, the experimental strategy used in the present study may be helpful to assess which specific molecular effects of VPA are relevant for the antiepileptic activity of this drug, and which are not.
丙戊酸(VPA)是一种主要的抗癫痫药物(AED),对多种癫痫发作类型均有效。它起效迅速,但其抗惊厥活性在长期治疗过程中会增强,这无法用血浆或脑中药物或代谢物的蓄积来解释。在对多种不同药物靶点的众多其他作用中,VPA是组蛋白脱乙酰酶(HDACs)的抑制剂,而HDACs参与基因表达的调控。HDAC抑制的功能后果通常在用HDAC抑制剂(如VPA)治疗期间发展缓慢。因此,我们推测VPA对脑HDACs的抑制作用以及由此导致的基因表达增加可以解释该药物长期治疗期间抗惊厥活性的增加。通过在全身性癫痫发作的小鼠模型中比较VPA和选择性HDAC抑制剂曲古抑菌素A(TSA)的作用来检验这一假设。静脉注射戊四氮(PTZ)用于确定药物对不同癫痫发作类型的影响,即肌阵挛性、阵挛性和强直性发作。VPA(200mg/kg,每日两次)迅速提高了对所有癫痫发作类型的PTZ阈值,但在长期治疗期间,这种作用增加了两倍。用低剂量(0.5mg/kg,每日两次)或高剂量(5mg/kg,每日两次)TSA治疗后,未确定剂量依赖性抗惊厥作用。这一发现反驳了HDAC抑制对VPA抗惊厥活性起作用的观点。鉴于VPA有多个细胞外和细胞内靶点,本研究中使用的实验策略可能有助于评估VPA的哪些特定分子效应与该药物的抗癫痫活性相关,哪些不相关。