Department of Neurological Sciences, Larner College of Medicine, University of Vermont, Burlington, VT 05405.
Department of Genetics and Development, Institute for Genomic Medicine, Columbia University, New York, NY 10032.
eNeuro. 2021 Mar 10;8(2). doi: 10.1523/ENEURO.0269-20.2020. Print 2021 Mar-Apr.
Developmental epileptic encephalopathies (DEEs) are severe seizure disorders that occur in infants and young children, characterized by developmental delay, cognitive decline, and early mortality. Recent efforts have identified a wide variety of genetic variants that cause DEEs. Among these, variants in the gene have emerged as definitive causes of DEEs, including infantile spasms and Lennox-Gastaut syndrome. A mouse model of -associated DEE, known as "Fitful" ( ), recapitulates key features of the disease, including spontaneous seizures, early lethality, and neuronal degeneration. Previous work showed that DNM1 is a key regulator of synaptic vesicle (SV) endocytosis and synaptic transmission and suggested that inhibitory neurotransmission may be more reliant on DNM1 function than excitatory transmission. The variant is thought to encode a dominant negative DNM1 protein; however, the effects of the variant on synaptic transmission are largely unknown. To understand these synaptic effects, we recorded from pairs of cultured mouse cortical neurons and characterized all four major connection types [excitation of excitation (E-E), inhibition of inhibition (I-I), E-I, I-E]. Miniature and spontaneous EPSCs and IPSCs were larger, but less frequent, at all synaptic types, and neurons had reduced expression of excitatory and inhibitory SV markers. Baseline evoked transmission, however, was reduced only at inhibitory synapses onto excitatory neurons, because of a smaller pool of releasable SVs. In addition to these synaptic alterations, neurons degenerated later in development, although their activity levels were reduced, suggesting that may impair synaptic transmission and neuronal health through distinct mechanisms.
发育性癫痫性脑病 (DEE) 是一种严重的癫痫疾病,发生在婴儿和幼儿中,其特征是发育迟缓、认知能力下降和早逝。最近的研究努力已经确定了许多导致 DEE 的遗传变异。其中, 基因中的变异已成为 DEE 的明确病因,包括婴儿痉挛症和 Lennox-Gastaut 综合征。一种称为“Fitful”( )的 基因相关 DEE 的小鼠模型,重现了该疾病的关键特征,包括自发性癫痫发作、早期致死性和神经元变性。先前的工作表明,DNM1 是突触小泡 (SV) 内吞作用和突触传递的关键调节剂,并表明抑制性神经传递可能比兴奋性传递更依赖 DNM1 功能。该 变异被认为编码显性负 DNM1 蛋白;然而, 变异对突触传递的影响在很大程度上是未知的。为了了解这些突触效应,我们记录了培养的小鼠皮质神经元对的影响,并对所有四种主要连接类型[兴奋的兴奋 (E-E)、抑制的抑制 (I-I)、E-I、I-E]进行了特征描述。在所有 突触类型中,微小和自发性 EPSC 和 IPSC 更大,但频率更低,并且 神经元的兴奋性和抑制性 SV 标志物表达减少。然而,由于可释放 SV 池较小,仅在兴奋性神经元上的抑制性突触处,基线诱发传递才减少。除了这些突触改变之外, 神经元在发育后期退化,尽管它们的活动水平降低,这表明 可能通过不同的机制损害突触传递和神经元健康。