A serious consequence of status epilepticus (SE) is memory impairment. Yet, remarkably little is known about the pathophysiological mechanisms responsible for this cognitive deficit. Exposing rats to status epilepticus during early adolescence causes impairment of spatial memory in the water maze and, in parallel, marked abnormalities in both the positional firing patterns of place cells and the stability of such patterns. These findings corroborate recent work demonstrating strong relationships between the ongoing activity of place cells and the ability of rats to perform adequately in spatial tasks. Thus, place cells may serve as a cell-level indicator of spatial memory, a very high level cognitive function of the rat hippocampus. A major goal of the studies proposed in this grant application is to rigorously test the idea that place cell abnormalities are markers of spatial memory impairment seen after induction of experimental epilepsy in rats.
Our first aim i s to determine the timing of place cell abnormalities following SE in adult rats and to compare this time course with the timing of changes in spatial memory and cerebral excitability. In this aim we will compare the time course of seizure-induced changes in hippocampal place cell function (firing rates, precision, and stability) with changes in cognitive function and hippocampal excitability. A critical question asked following SE is whether recurrent seizures or interictal epileptiform discharges (spikes and sharp waves) further harm cognitive function. Place cell studies provide us with the opportunity to examine the effects of seizures and spikes on cognitive function at the single cell level. Using mechanistically-oriented hypotheses we will determine whether spontaneous recurrent seizures and interictal epileptiform activity following SE alters place cell function. A key step in understanding the mechanisms of seizure-induced cognitive deficits is to determine whether place cell and visual-spatial memory impairment extend to other seizure insults.
Our third aim i s to assess the effects of serial seizures, which result in impaired water maze performance but have a distinctly different pathological pattern than SE, on place cell function. Taken together these studies will provide insight into the mechanisms of seizure-induced cognitive dysfunction which will be critical as we attempt to develop novel therapeutic interventions.

Agency
National Institute of Health (NIH)
Institute
National Institute of Neurological Disorders and Stroke (NINDS)
Type
Research Project (R01)
Project #
5R01NS044295-03
Application #
7005820
Study Section
Special Emphasis Panel (ZRG1-BDCN-2 (02))
Program Officer
Fureman, Brandy E
Project Start
2004-01-01
Project End
2007-12-31
Budget Start
2006-01-01
Budget End
2006-12-31
Support Year
3
Fiscal Year
2006
Total Cost
$321,110
Indirect Cost
Name
Dartmouth College
Department
Internal Medicine/Medicine
Type
Schools of Medicine
DUNS #
041027822
City
Hanover
State
NH
Country
United States
Zip Code
03755
Nagy, James I; Pereda, Alberto E; Rash, John E (2017) On the occurrence and enigmatic functions of mixed (chemical plus electrical) synapses in the mammalian CNS. Neurosci Lett :
Rash, John E; Vanderpool, Kimberly G; Yasumura, Thomas et al. (2016) KV1 channels identified in rodent myelinated axons, linked to Cx29 in innermost myelin: support for electrically active myelin in mammalian saltatory conduction. J Neurophysiol 115:1836-59
Rubio, M E; Nagy, J I (2015) Connexin36 expression in major centers of the auditory system in the CNS of mouse and rat: Evidence for neurons forming purely electrical synapses and morphologically mixed synapses. Neuroscience 303:604-29
Bautista, W; Rash, J E; Vanderpool, K G et al. (2014) Re-evaluation of connexins associated with motoneurons in rodent spinal cord, sexually dimorphic motor nuclei and trigeminal motor nucleus. Eur J Neurosci 39:757-70
Nair, Swayamprabha; Morse, Richard P; Mott, Stephen H et al. (2014) Transitory effect of spike and spike-and-wave discharges on EEG power in children. Brain Dev 36:505-9
Nagy, James Imre; Urena-Ramirez, Viridiana; Ghia, Jean-Eric (2014) Functional alterations in gut contractility after connexin36 ablation and evidence for gap junctions forming electrical synapses between nitrergic enteric neurons. FEBS Lett 588:1480-90
Bautista, W; McCrea, D A; Nagy, J I (2014) Connexin36 identified at morphologically mixed chemical/electrical synapses on trigeminal motoneurons and at primary afferent terminals on spinal cord neurons in adult mouse and rat. Neuroscience 263:159-80
Bautista, W; Nagy, J I (2014) Connexin36 in gap junctions forming electrical synapses between motoneurons in sexually dimorphic motor nuclei in spinal cord of rat and mouse. Eur J Neurosci 39:771-87
Holmes, Gregory L; Bender, Alex C; Wu, Edie X et al. (2012) Maturation of EEG oscillations in children with sodium channel mutations. Brain Dev 34:469-77
Bautista, Wendy; Nagy, James I; Dai, Yue et al. (2012) Requirement of neuronal connexin36 in pathways mediating presynaptic inhibition of primary afferents in functionally mature mouse spinal cord. J Physiol 590:3821-39

Showing the most recent 10 out of 41 publications