Rare Brain Disorders Program, Department of Neurology, University of Texas Southwestern Medical Center, Dallas, TX 75390, USA.
Advanced Imaging Research Center, University of Texas Southwestern Medical Center, Dallas, TX 75390, USA.
Sci Transl Med. 2022 Oct 5;14(665):eabn2956. doi: 10.1126/scitranslmed.abn2956.
Individuals with glucose transporter type I deficiency (G1D) habitually experience nutrient-responsive epilepsy associated with decreased brain glucose. However, the mechanistic association between blood glucose concentration and brain excitability in the context of G1D remains to be elucidated. Electroencephalography (EEG) in G1D individuals revealed nutrition time-dependent seizure oscillations often associated with preserved volition despite electrographic generalization and uniform average oscillation duration and periodicity, suggesting increased facilitation of an underlying neural loop circuit. Nonlinear EEG ictal source localization analysis and simultaneous EEG/functional magnetic resonance imaging converged on the thalamus-sensorimotor cortex as one potential circuit, and F-deoxyglucose positron emission tomography (F-DG-PET) illustrated decreased glucose accumulation in this circuit. This pattern, reflected in a decreased thalamic to striatal F signal ratio, can aid with the PET imaging diagnosis of the disorder, whereas the absence of noticeable ictal behavioral changes challenges the postulated requirement for normal thalamocortical activity during consciousness. In G1D mice, F-DG-PET and mass spectrometry also revealed decreased brain glucose and glycogen, but preserved tricarboxylic acid cycle intermediates, indicating no overall energy metabolism failure. In brain slices from these animals, synaptic inhibition of cortical pyramidal neurons and thalamic relay neurons was decreased, and neuronal disinhibition was mitigated by metabolic sources of carbon; tonic-clonic seizures were also suppressed by α-amino-3-hydroxy-5-methyl-4-isoxazolepropionic acid (AMPA) receptor inhibition. These results pose G1D as a thalamocortical synaptic disinhibition disease associated with increased glucose-dependent neuronal excitability, possibly in relation to reduced glycogen. Together with findings in other metabolic defects, inhibitory neuron dysfunction is emerging as a modulable mechanism of hyperexcitability.
个体葡萄糖转运蛋白 1 缺乏症(G1D)患者常出现与脑葡萄糖减少相关的营养反应性癫痫。然而,G1D 患者血糖浓度与脑兴奋性之间的机制联系仍有待阐明。G1D 个体的脑电图(EEG)显示,营养时间依赖性发作振荡通常与保留意志有关,尽管脑电图广泛化和均匀平均振荡持续时间和周期性,但提示潜在神经环路的促进作用增加。非线性 EEG 发作源定位分析和同时 EEG/功能磁共振成像集中在丘脑-感觉运动皮层作为一个潜在的回路,而 F-脱氧葡萄糖正电子发射断层扫描(F-DG-PET)表明该回路中葡萄糖积累减少。这种模式反映在丘脑纹状体 F 信号比降低,有助于该疾病的 PET 成像诊断,而无明显的发作行为变化挑战了意识过程中正常丘脑皮质活动的假定要求。在 G1D 小鼠中,F-DG-PET 和质谱也显示脑葡萄糖和糖原减少,但三羧酸循环中间产物保留,表明没有整体能量代谢失败。在这些动物的脑切片中,皮质锥体神经元和丘脑中继神经元的突触抑制减少,代谢碳源减轻神经元去抑制,强直阵挛性发作也被α-氨基-3-羟基-5-甲基-4-异恶唑丙酸(AMPA)受体抑制抑制。这些结果表明 G1D 是一种与增加的葡萄糖依赖性神经元兴奋性相关的丘脑皮质突触去抑制疾病,可能与糖原减少有关。与其他代谢缺陷的发现一起,抑制性神经元功能障碍作为一种可调节的过度兴奋机制正在出现。