Home-cage monitoring ascertains signatures of ictal and interictal behavior in mouse models of generalized seizures.

Epilepsy is a significant contributor to worldwide disability. In epilepsy, disability can be broadly divided into two components: ictal (pertaining to the burden of unpredictable seizures and associated medical complications including death) and interictal (pertaining to more pervasive debilitating...

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Main Authors: Miranda J Jankovic, Paarth P Kapadia, Vaishnav Krishnan
Format: Article
Language:English
Published: Public Library of Science (PLoS) 2019-01-01
Series:PLoS ONE
Online Access:https://doi.org/10.1371/journal.pone.0224856
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spelling doaj-53ba4d4f6e944cb8bc569ddcdd1148bc2021-03-03T21:13:37ZengPublic Library of Science (PLoS)PLoS ONE1932-62032019-01-011411e022485610.1371/journal.pone.0224856Home-cage monitoring ascertains signatures of ictal and interictal behavior in mouse models of generalized seizures.Miranda J JankovicPaarth P KapadiaVaishnav KrishnanEpilepsy is a significant contributor to worldwide disability. In epilepsy, disability can be broadly divided into two components: ictal (pertaining to the burden of unpredictable seizures and associated medical complications including death) and interictal (pertaining to more pervasive debilitating changes in cognitive and emotional behavior). In this study, we objectively and noninvasively appraise aspects of ictal and interictal behavior in mice using instrumented home-cage chambers designed to assay kinematic and appetitive behavioral measures. Through daily intraperitoneal injections of the chemoconvulsant pentylenetetrazole (PTZ) applied to C57BL/6J mice, we coordinately measure how "behavioral severity" (complex dynamic changes in movement and sheltering behavior) and convulsive severity (latency and occurrence of convulsive seizures) evolve or kindle with repeated injections. By closely studying long epochs between PTZ injections, we identify an interictal syndrome of nocturnal hypoactivity and increased sheltering behavior which remits with the cessation of seizure induction. We observe elements of this interictal behavioral syndrome in seizure-prone DBA/2J mice and in mice with a pathogenic Scn1a mutation (modeling Dravet syndrome). Through analyzing their responses to PTZ, we illustrate how convulsive severity and "behavioral" severity are distinct and independent aspects of the overall severity of a PTZ-induced seizure. Our results illustrate the utility of an ethologically centered automated approach to quantitatively appraise murine expressions of disability in mouse models of seizures and epilepsy. In doing so, this study highlights the very unique psychopharmacological profile of PTZ.https://doi.org/10.1371/journal.pone.0224856
collection DOAJ
language English
format Article
sources DOAJ
author Miranda J Jankovic
Paarth P Kapadia
Vaishnav Krishnan
spellingShingle Miranda J Jankovic
Paarth P Kapadia
Vaishnav Krishnan
Home-cage monitoring ascertains signatures of ictal and interictal behavior in mouse models of generalized seizures.
PLoS ONE
author_facet Miranda J Jankovic
Paarth P Kapadia
Vaishnav Krishnan
author_sort Miranda J Jankovic
title Home-cage monitoring ascertains signatures of ictal and interictal behavior in mouse models of generalized seizures.
title_short Home-cage monitoring ascertains signatures of ictal and interictal behavior in mouse models of generalized seizures.
title_full Home-cage monitoring ascertains signatures of ictal and interictal behavior in mouse models of generalized seizures.
title_fullStr Home-cage monitoring ascertains signatures of ictal and interictal behavior in mouse models of generalized seizures.
title_full_unstemmed Home-cage monitoring ascertains signatures of ictal and interictal behavior in mouse models of generalized seizures.
title_sort home-cage monitoring ascertains signatures of ictal and interictal behavior in mouse models of generalized seizures.
publisher Public Library of Science (PLoS)
series PLoS ONE
issn 1932-6203
publishDate 2019-01-01
description Epilepsy is a significant contributor to worldwide disability. In epilepsy, disability can be broadly divided into two components: ictal (pertaining to the burden of unpredictable seizures and associated medical complications including death) and interictal (pertaining to more pervasive debilitating changes in cognitive and emotional behavior). In this study, we objectively and noninvasively appraise aspects of ictal and interictal behavior in mice using instrumented home-cage chambers designed to assay kinematic and appetitive behavioral measures. Through daily intraperitoneal injections of the chemoconvulsant pentylenetetrazole (PTZ) applied to C57BL/6J mice, we coordinately measure how "behavioral severity" (complex dynamic changes in movement and sheltering behavior) and convulsive severity (latency and occurrence of convulsive seizures) evolve or kindle with repeated injections. By closely studying long epochs between PTZ injections, we identify an interictal syndrome of nocturnal hypoactivity and increased sheltering behavior which remits with the cessation of seizure induction. We observe elements of this interictal behavioral syndrome in seizure-prone DBA/2J mice and in mice with a pathogenic Scn1a mutation (modeling Dravet syndrome). Through analyzing their responses to PTZ, we illustrate how convulsive severity and "behavioral" severity are distinct and independent aspects of the overall severity of a PTZ-induced seizure. Our results illustrate the utility of an ethologically centered automated approach to quantitatively appraise murine expressions of disability in mouse models of seizures and epilepsy. In doing so, this study highlights the very unique psychopharmacological profile of PTZ.
url https://doi.org/10.1371/journal.pone.0224856
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