[HTML][HTML] Bim regulation may determine hippocampal vulnerability after injurious seizures and in temporal lobe epilepsy

S Shinoda, CK Schindler, R Meller… - The Journal of …, 2004 - Am Soc Clin Investig
S Shinoda, CK Schindler, R Meller, NK So, T Araki, A Yamamoto, JQ Lan, W Taki, RP Simon…
The Journal of clinical investigation, 2004Am Soc Clin Investig
Programmed cell death pathways have been implicated in the mechanism by which neurons
die following brief and prolonged seizures, but the significance of proapoptotic Bcl-2 family
proteins in the process remains poorly defined. Expression of the death agonist Bcl-2–
interacting mediator of cell death (Bim) is under the control of the forkhead in
rhabdomyosarcoma (FKHR) transcription factors. This prompted us to examine the response
of this pathway to experimental seizures and in hippocampi from patients with intractable …
Programmed cell death pathways have been implicated in the mechanism by which neurons die following brief and prolonged seizures, but the significance of proapoptotic Bcl-2 family proteins in the process remains poorly defined. Expression of the death agonist Bcl-2–interacting mediator of cell death (Bim) is under the control of the forkhead in rhabdomyosarcoma (FKHR) transcription factors. This prompted us to examine the response of this pathway to experimental seizures and in hippocampi from patients with intractable temporal lobe epilepsy. A short period of status epilepticus in rats that damaged the hippocampus activated FKHR/FKHRL-1 and induced a significant increase in expression of Bim. Blocking of FKHR/FKHRL-1 dephosphorylation after seizures improved hippocampal neuronal survival in vivo, and Bim antisense oligonucleotides were neuroprotective against seizures in vitro. Inhibition of Akt increased the FKHR/Bim response and DNA fragmentation within the normally resistant cortex. Analysis of hippocampi from patients with intractable epilepsy revealed that Bim levels were significantly lower than in controls and FKHR was inhibited; we were able to reproduce these results experimentally in rats by evoking multiple brief, noninjurious electroshock seizures. We conclude that Bim expression may be a critical determinant of whether seizures damage the brain, and that its control may be neuroprotective in status epilepticus and epilepsy.
The Journal of Clinical Investigation