Function of inhibitory micronetworks is spared by Na+ channel-acting anticonvulsant drugs

The mechanisms of action of many CNS drugs have been studied extensively on the level of their target proteins, but the effects of these compounds on the level of complex CNS networks that are composed of different types of excitatory and inhibitory neurons are not well understood. Many currently us...

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Veröffentlicht in:The Journal of neuroscience 2014-07, Vol.34 (29), p.9720-9735
Hauptverfasser: Pothmann, Leonie, Müller, Christina, Averkin, Robert G, Bellistri, Elisa, Miklitz, Carolin, Uebachs, Mischa, Remy, Stefan, Menendez de la Prida, Liset, Beck, Heinz
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container_end_page 9735
container_issue 29
container_start_page 9720
container_title The Journal of neuroscience
container_volume 34
creator Pothmann, Leonie
Müller, Christina
Averkin, Robert G
Bellistri, Elisa
Miklitz, Carolin
Uebachs, Mischa
Remy, Stefan
Menendez de la Prida, Liset
Beck, Heinz
description The mechanisms of action of many CNS drugs have been studied extensively on the level of their target proteins, but the effects of these compounds on the level of complex CNS networks that are composed of different types of excitatory and inhibitory neurons are not well understood. Many currently used anticonvulsant drugs are known to exert potent use-dependent blocking effects on voltage-gated Na(+) channels, which are thought to underlie the inhibition of pathological high-frequency firing. However, some GABAergic inhibitory neurons are capable of firing at very high rates, suggesting that these anticonvulsants should cause impaired GABAergic inhibition. We have, therefore, studied the effects of anticonvulsant drugs acting via use-dependent block of voltage-gated Na(+) channels on GABAergic inhibitory micronetworks in the rodent hippocampus. We find that firing of pyramidal neurons is reliably inhibited in a use-dependent manner by the prototypical Na(+) channel blocker carbamazepine. In contrast, a combination of intrinsic and synaptic properties renders synaptically driven firing of interneurons essentially insensitive to this anticonvulsant. In addition, a combination of voltage imaging and electrophysiological experiments reveal that GABAergic feedforward and feedback inhibition is unaffected by carbamazepine and additional commonly used Na(+) channel-acting anticonvulsants, both in control and epileptic animals. Moreover, inhibition in control and epileptic rats recruited by in vivo activity patterns was similarly unaffected. These results suggest that sparing of inhibition is an important principle underlying the powerful reduction of CNS excitability exerted by anticonvulsant drugs.
doi_str_mv 10.1523/JNEUROSCI.2395-13.2014
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source MEDLINE; EZB-FREE-00999 freely available EZB journals; PubMed Central
subjects Animals
Anticonvulsants - pharmacology
Anticonvulsants - therapeutic use
Biophysics
Carbamazepine - pharmacology
Convulsants - toxicity
Disease Models, Animal
Electric Stimulation
Epilepsy - chemically induced
Epilepsy - pathology
Hippocampus - cytology
In Vitro Techniques
Inhibitory Postsynaptic Potentials - drug effects
Kainic Acid - toxicity
Membrane Potentials - drug effects
Membrane Potentials - physiology
Nerve Net - drug effects
Neural Inhibition - drug effects
Neurons - drug effects
Patch-Clamp Techniques
Pilocarpine - toxicity
Rats
Rats, Wistar
Sodium Channels - metabolism
title Function of inhibitory micronetworks is spared by Na+ channel-acting anticonvulsant drugs
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