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Home: Papers of the Week
Annotation


Calcagnotto ME, Ruiz LP, Blanco MM, Santos-Junior JG, Valente MF, Patti C, Frussa-Filho R, Santiago MF, Zipancic I, Alvarez-Dolado M, Mello LE, Longo BM. Effect of neuronal precursor cells derived from medial ganglionic eminence in an acute epileptic seizure model. Epilepsia. 2010 Jul;51 Suppl 3:71-5. PubMed Abstract

Comments on Related News
  Related News: Stem Cells Treat Epileptic Symptoms in Mice

Comment by:  Jeffrey L. Noebels
Submitted 8 May 2013  |  Permalink Posted 8 May 2013

Loss of synaptic inhibition is a well-established cause of seizures, and this new study supports previous work from this laboratory showing that transplanted interneuronal precursors can become active participants in a hyperexcitable circuit and silence seizures in a genetic mouse model of epilepsy. Here, the model employed was a healthy mouse injected with a chemical convulsant, pilocarpine, that induces a hippocampal seizure focus sharing similarities with human temporal lobe epilepsy, but different in that brain development was otherwise normal and the circuit properties, while prone to generating seizures, are vastly different. In this model, grafted precursors not only reduced seizures, but also even improved performance deficits on behavioral tests relevant to hippocampal function. The authors conclude the approach holds promise not only for intractable epilepsies, but also perhaps other disorders that include altered hippocampal function such as Alzheimer’s disease and autism.

The groundbreaking aspects of this research are clear and mark a giant step toward a future...  Read more

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