Concepedia

Publication | Open Access

K<sub>V</sub>7/M channels as targets for lipopolysaccharide‐induced inflammatory neuronal hyperexcitability

33

Citations

80

References

2016

Year

Abstract

Acute brain insults and many chronic brain diseases manifest an innate inflammatory response. The hallmark of this response is glia activation, which promotes repair of damaged tissue, but also induces structural and functional changes that may lead to an increase in neuronal excitability. We have investigated the mechanisms involved in the modulation of neuronal activity by acute inflammation. Initiating inflammatory responses in hippocampal tissue rapidly led to neuronal depolarization and repetitive firing even in the absence of active synaptic transmission. This action was mediated by a complex metabotropic purinergic and glutamatergic glia-to-neuron signalling cascade, leading to the blockade of neuronal K<sub>V</sub> 7/M channels by Ca<sup>2+</sup> released from internal stores. These channels generate the low voltage-activating, non-inactivating M-type K<sup>+</sup> current (M-current) that controls intrinsic neuronal excitability, and its inhibition was the predominant cause of the inflammation-induced hyperexcitability. Our discovery that the ubiquitous K<sub>V</sub> 7/M channels are the downstream target of the inflammation-induced cascade, has far reaching implications for the understanding and treatment of many acute and chronic brain disorders.

References

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