A crucial epileptogenic site in the deep prepiriform cortex
- 17 October 1985
- journal article
- Published by Springer Nature in Nature
- Vol. 317 (6038) , 623-625
- https://doi.org/10.1038/317623a0
Abstract
Antagonists of gamma-aminobutyric acid (GABA)- or glycine-mediated neurotransmission, muscarinic cholinergic agonists, and excitatory amino acids and their analogues are all considered to be potent chemoconvulsant agents. However, although systemic injections of these agents have been used to create experimental models of generalized epilepsy, there has been no identification of a specific locus at which any of these drugs act to initiate generalized seizures. We recently located a forebrain region from which seizures can be elicited by the GABA antagonist bicuculline, and now report that manipulations of excitatory amino acid transmission and cholinergic transmission can also elicit seizures from this site. Bilateral clonic seizures can be elicited after unilateral application of picomole amounts of bicuculline, kainic acid or carbachol and micromole amounts of glutamate. Local application of the GABA agonist muscimol prevents the appearance of seizures on subsequent microinjection of all convulsant agents examined, whereas local application of the muscarinic antagonist, atropine, only prevents seizures induced by carbachol. This region is therefore a site of action for the epileptogenic effects of neuroactive agents with diverse mechanisms of action; it may also represent a site at which GABA agonists could function therapeutically to control epileptogenesis.Keywords
This publication has 16 references indexed in Scilit:
- Intracerebral site of convulsant action of bicucullineLife Sciences, 1985
- Regional brain glucose metabolism in chemically-induced seizures in the ratBrain Research, 1984
- Electrographic, clinical and pathological alterations following systemic administration of kainic acid, bicuculline or pentetrazole: Metabolic mapping using the deoxyglucose method with special reference to the pathology of epilepsyNeuroscience, 1981
- Kainic acid‐induced limbic seizuresNeurology, 1981
- The role of epileptic activity in hippocampal and ‘remote’ cerebral lesions induced by kainic acidBrain Research, 1980
- Injections of kainic acid into the amygdaloid complex of the rat: An electrographic, clinical and histological study in relation to the pathology of epilepsyNeuroscience, 1980
- Microinjection of kainic acid into the rat hippocampusEuropean Journal of Pharmacology, 1978
- Analysis of local discharges induced by intrahippocampal microinjection of carbachol or diisopropylfluorophosphate (DFP)International Journal of Neuropharmacology, 1968
- Comparison of the behavioral effects of electrical or chemical stimulation applied at the same brain lociExperimental Neurology, 1967
- Chemically Induced Epileptiform Seizures in the CatScience, 1963