Impact of JQ1 treatment on seizures, hippocampal gene expression, and gliosis in a mouse model of temporal lobe epilepsy

Author:

Harnett Aileen12,Mathoux Justine12,Wilson Marc‐Michel12,Heiland Mona12,Mamad Omar12,Srinivas Sujithra23,Sanfeliu Albert12,Sanz‐Rodriguez Amaya12,How Kelvin Lau E.12,Delanty Norman245,Cryan Jane4,Brett Francesca M.4,Farrell Michael A.4,O'Brien Donncha F.4,Henshall David C.12,Brennan Gary P.1236ORCID

Affiliation:

1. Department of Physiology and Medical Physics RCSI University of Medicine and Health Sciences Dublin Ireland

2. FutureNeuro Research Centre University College Dublin Dublin Ireland

3. UCD School of Biomolecular and Biomedical Science, UCD Conway Institute University College Dublin Dublin 4 Ireland

4. Beaumont Hospital Dublin Ireland

5. School of Pharmacy and Biomolecular Sciences RCSI University of Medicine and Health Sciences Dublin Ireland

6. UCD Conway Institute University College Dublin Dublin Ireland

Abstract

AbstractEpilepsy is a neurological disease characterised by recurrent seizures with complex aetiology. Temporal lobe epilepsy, the most common form in adults, can be acquired following brain insults including trauma, stroke, infection or sustained status epilepticus. The mechanisms that give rise to the formation and maintenance of hyperexcitable networks following acquired insults remain unknown, yet an extensive body of literature points towards persistent gene and epigenomic dysregulation as a potential mediator of this dysfunction. While much is known about the function of specific classes of epigenetic regulators (writers and erasers) in epilepsy, much less is known about the enzymes, which read the epigenome and modulate gene expression accordingly. Here, we explore the potential role for the epigenetic reader bromodomain and extra‐terminal domain (BET) proteins in epilepsy. Using the intra‐amygdala kainic acid model of temporal lobe epilepsy, we initially identified widespread dysregulation of important epigenetic regulators including EZH2 and REST as well as altered BRD4 expression in chronically epileptic mice. BRD4 activity was also notably affected by epilepsy‐provoking insults as seen by elevated binding to and transcriptional regulation of the immediate early gene Fos. Despite influencing early aspects of epileptogenesis, blocking BET protein activity with JQ1 had no overt effects on epilepsy development in mice but did alter glial reactivity and influence gene expression patterns, promoting various neurotransmitter signalling mechanisms and inflammatory pathways in the hippocampus. Together, these results confirm that epigenetic reader activity is affected by epilepsy‐provoking brain insults and that BET activity may exert cell‐specific actions on inflammation in epilepsy.

Funder

Science Foundation Ireland

Publisher

Wiley

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