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Altered vesicular glutamate transporter expression in human temporal lobe epilepsy with hippocampal sclerosis

Authors :
Giulia Albertini
Cathy Jensen
Eleonora Aronica
Thomas Demuyser
Ellen Merckx
Eduard-Mihai Bentea
Ann Massie
Ilse Julia Smolders
Joeri Van Liefferinge
ANS - Amsterdam Neuroscience
APH - Amsterdam Public Health
Pathology
Cellular and Computational Neuroscience (SILS, FNWI)
Faculteit der Geneeskunde
Pharmaceutical and Pharmacological Sciences
Pathology/molecular and cellular medicine
Experimental Pharmacology
Neuro-Aging & Viro-Immunotherapy
Source :
Neuroscience letters, 590, 184-188. Elsevier Ireland Ltd, Neuroscience Letters, 590, 184-188. Elsevier
Publication Year :
2015

Abstract

Vesicular glutamate transporters (VGLUTs) are responsible for loading glutamate into synaptic vesicles. Altered VGLUT protein expression has been suggested to affect quantal size and glutamate release under both physiological and pathological conditions. In this study, we investigated mRNA and protein expression levels of the three VGLUT subtypes in hippocampal tissue of patients suffering from temporal lobe epilepsy (TLE) with hippocampal sclerosis (HS), International League Against Epilepsy type1 (ILAE typel) compared to autopsy controls, using quantitative polymerase chain reaction and semi-quantitative western blotting. mRNA expression levels of the VGLUTs are unaffected in hippocampal epileptic tissue compared to autopsy controls. At the protein level, VGLUT1 expression remains unaltered, while VGLUT2 is significantly decreased and VGLUT3 protein is significantly increased in hippocampal biopsies from TLE patients compared to controls. Our findings at the protein level can be explained by previously described histopathological changes observed in HS. Although VGLUTs have been repeatedly investigated in distinct rodent epilepsy models, their expression levels were hitherto not fully unraveled in the most difficult-to-treat form of epilepsy: TLE with HS ILAE type(We here, demonstrate for the first time that VGLUT2 protein expression is significantly decreased and VGLUT3 protein is significantly increased in the hippocampus of patients suffering from TLE with HS ILAE typel compared to autopsy controls. (c) 2015 Elsevier Ireland Ltd. All rights reserved

Details

Language :
English
ISSN :
03043940
Volume :
590
Database :
OpenAIRE
Journal :
Neuroscience Letters
Accession number :
edsair.doi.dedup.....ae03a7a4faf9bcb48198eed843402f81