Disease-modifying effects of sodium selenate in a model of drug-resistant, temporal lobe epilepsy

Author:

Casillas-Espinosa Pablo M123ORCID,Anderson Alison12,Harutyunyan Anna12ORCID,Li Crystal2,Lee Jiyoon1,Braine Emma L12,Brady Rhys D12,Sun Mujun2,Huang Cheng4,Barlow Christopher K4,Shah Anup D4,Schittenhelm Ralf B4,Mychasiuk Richelle2,Jones Nigel C12,Shultz Sandy R12ORCID,O'Brien Terence J123ORCID

Affiliation:

1. Department of Medicine, The Royal Melbourne Hospital, The University of Melbourne

2. Department of Neuroscience, Central Clinical School, Monash University

3. Monash Proteomics & Metabolomics Facility and Monash Biomedicine Discovery Institute, Monash University

4. Department of Neurology, The Alfred Hospital, Commercial Road,

Abstract

There are no pharmacological disease-modifying treatments with an enduring effect to mitigate the seizures and comorbidities of established chronic temporal lobe epilepsy (TLE). This study aimed to evaluate for disease modifying effects of sodium selenate treatment in the chronically epileptic rat post-status epilepticus (SE) model of drug-resistant TLE. Wistar rats underwent kainic acid-induced SE or sham. Ten-weeks post-SE, animals received sodium selenate, levetiracetam, or vehicle subcutaneousinfusion continuously for 4 weeks. To evaluate the effects of the treatments, one week of continuous video-EEG was acquired before, during, and 4, 8 weeks post-treatment, followed by behavioral tests. Targeted and untargeted proteomics and metabolomics were performed on post-mortem brain tissue to identify potential pathways associated with modified disease outcomes. Telomere length was investigated as a novel surrogate marker of epilepsy disease severity in our current study. The results showed that sodium selenate treatment was associated with mitigation of measures of disease severity at 8 weeks post-treatment cessation; reducing the number of spontaneous seizures (p< 0.05), cognitive dysfunction (p< 0.05), and sensorimotor deficits (p< 0.01). Moreover, selenate treatment was associated with increased protein phosphatase 2A (PP2A) expression, reduced hyperphosphorylated tau, and reversed telomere length shortening (p< 0.05). Network medicine integration of multi-omics/pre-clinical outcomes identified protein-metabolite modules positively correlated with TLE. Our results provide evidence that treatment with sodium selenate results in a sustained disease-modifying effect in chronically epileptic rats in the post-KA SE model of TLE, including improved comorbid learning and memory deficits.

Funder

National Health and Medical Research Council

University of Melbourne

CIHR Skin Research Training Centre

Publisher

eLife Sciences Publications, Ltd

Subject

General Immunology and Microbiology,General Biochemistry, Genetics and Molecular Biology,General Medicine,General Neuroscience

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