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First published online on September 28, 2006.
Copyright © 2006 by The Physiological Society
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jphysiol.2006.119297v1
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Received August 16, 2006
Revised September 14, 2006
Accepted after revision September 14, 2006

Cell domain-dependent changes in the glutamatergic and GABAergic drives during epileptogenesis in the rat CA1 region

Lynda El Hassar1, mathiau milh2, fabrice wendling3, nadine ferrand2, monique esclapez1, and Christophe Bernard4*

1 INSERM U751
2 INMED-INSERM U29
3 LTSI-INSERM U642
4 INSERM U 751

* To whom correspondence should be addressed. E-mail: christophe.bernard{at}medecine.univ-mrs.fr.

An increased ratio of the glutamatergic drive to the overall glutamatergic/GABAergic drive characterizes the chronic stage of temporal lobe epilepsy (TLE), but it is unclear whether this modification is present during the latent period that often precedes the epileptic stage. Using the pilocarpine model of TLE in rats, we report that this ratio is decreased in hippocampal CA1 pyramidal cells during the early phase of the latent period (3-5 days post pilocarpine). It is however increased during the late phase of the latent period (7- 10 days post pilocarpine), via cell domain-dependent alterations in synaptic current properties, concomitantly with the occurrence of interictal-like activity in vivo. During the late latent period, the glutamatergic drive was increased in somata via an enhancement in EPSC decay time constant and in dendrites via an increase in EPSC frequency and amplitude. The GABAergic drive remained unchanged in the soma but was decreased in dendrites as the drop off in IPSC frequency was more marked than the increase in IPSC kinetics. Theoretical considerations suggest that these modifications are sufficient to produce interictal-like activity. In epileptic animals, the ratio of the glutamatergic drive to the overall synaptic drive was not further modified, despite additional changes in synaptic current frequency and kinetics. These results show that the global changes to more glutamatergic and less GABAergic activities in the CA1 region precede the chronic stage of epilepsy, possibly facilitating the occurrence and/or the propagation of interictal activity.


Key words: Epilepsy • GABA • Glutamate




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