| O 22: Reactive Oxygen Species and Epilepsy | 
								
								  | S Kovac *    ,  S Williams    ,  AM Domijan    ,  MC Walker    ,  AY Abramov    | 
								
								  | University Hospital Münster, Münster, Germany , stjepana.kovac@ukmuenster.de | 
								
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								  | Abstract:       (3739 Views) | 
								
								  | Seizure activity has been proposed to result in the generation of reactive oxygen species (ROS), which then contribute to seizure-induced neuronal damage and eventually cell death. Although the mechanisms of seizure-induced ROS generation are unclear, mitochondria and cellular calcium overload have been proposed to have a crucial role. We aim to determine the sources of seizure-induced ROS and their contribution to seizure-induced cell death. Live cell imaging techniques in glio-neuronal cultures and in ex vivo epileptic brain tissue. We show that prolonged seizure-like activity increases ROS production in an NMDA receptor-dependent manner. Unexpectedly, however, mitochondria did not contribute to ROS production during seizure-like activity. ROS were generated primarily by NADPH oxidase and later by xanthine oxidase (XO) activity in a calcium-independent manner. Inhibition of NADPH or XO markedly reduced seizure-like activity-induced neuronal apoptosis. In addition, ROS were upregulated in chronic epilepsy in ex vivo brain slices. Inhibition of ROS production in vivo by AEBSF, a NADPH oxidase inhibitor, markedly reduced seizure-induced cell death. These findings demonstrate a critical role for ROS, generated by NADPH oxidase, contributing to seizure-induced cell death. These findings point to NADPH oxidase inhibition as a novel treatment strategy to prevent brain injury in seizures, status epilepticus and chronic epilepsy.  | 
								
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								  | Keywords:  Cell Death, Epilepsy, Brain Injury | 
								
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								  | Full-Text  [PDF 219 kb] 
                                    
                                     
                                     
                                    
									  
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								  | Type of Study:  Review --- Open Access, CC-BY-NC |
                                  Subject: 
                                  Basic research in Neuroscience | 
                                
                                  
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