Termination of convulsion seizures by destabilizing and perturbing seizure memory engrams
Shirong Lai, Libo Zhang, Xinyu Tu, Xinyue Ma, Yujing Song, Kexin Cao, Miaomiao Li, Jihong Meng, Yiqiang Shi, Qing Wu, Chen Yang, Zifan Lan, Chunyue Geoffrey Lau, Jie Shi, Weining Ma, Shaoyi Li, Yan-Xue Xue, Zhuo Huang- Multidisciplinary
Epileptogenesis, arising from alterations in synaptic strength, shares mechanistic and phenotypic parallels with memory formation. However, direct evidence supporting the existence of seizure memory remains scarce. Leveraging a conditioned seizure memory (CSM) paradigm, we found that CSM enabled the environmental cue to trigger seizure repetitively, and activating cue-responding engram cells could generate CSM artificially. Moreover, cue exposure initiated an analogous process of memory reconsolidation driven by mammalian target of rapamycin–brain-derived neurotrophic factor signaling. Pharmacological targeting of the mammalian target of rapamycin pathway within a limited time window reduced seizures in animals and interictal epileptiform discharges in patients with refractory seizures. Our findings reveal a causal link between seizure memory engrams and seizures, which leads us to a deeper understanding of epileptogenesis and points to a promising direction for epilepsy treatment.