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A Drosophila systems model of pentylenetetrazole induced locomotor plasticity responsive to antiepileptic drugs

BACKGROUND: Rodent kindling induced by PTZ is a widely used model of epileptogenesis and AED testing. Overlapping pathophysiological mechanisms may underlie epileptogenesis and other neuropsychiatric conditions. Besides epilepsy, AEDs are widely used in treating various neuropsychiatric disorders. M...

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Autores principales: Mohammad, Farhan, Singh, Priyanka, Sharma, Abhay
Formato: Texto
Lenguaje:English
Publicado: BioMed Central 2009
Materias:
Acceso en línea:https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pmc/articles/PMC2657775/
https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pubmed/19154620
http://dx.doi.org/10.1186/1752-0509-3-11
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author Mohammad, Farhan
Singh, Priyanka
Sharma, Abhay
author_facet Mohammad, Farhan
Singh, Priyanka
Sharma, Abhay
author_sort Mohammad, Farhan
collection PubMed
description BACKGROUND: Rodent kindling induced by PTZ is a widely used model of epileptogenesis and AED testing. Overlapping pathophysiological mechanisms may underlie epileptogenesis and other neuropsychiatric conditions. Besides epilepsy, AEDs are widely used in treating various neuropsychiatric disorders. Mechanisms of AEDs' long term action in these disorders are poorly understood. We describe here a Drosophila systems model of PTZ induced locomotor plasticity that is responsive to AEDs. RESULTS: We empirically determined a regime in which seven days of PTZ treatment and seven days of subsequent PTZ discontinuation respectively cause a decrease and an increase in climbing speed of Drosophila adults. Concomitant treatment with NaVP and LEV, not ETH, GBP and VGB, suppressed the development of locomotor deficit at the end of chronic PTZ phase. Concomitant LEV also ameliorated locomotor alteration that develops after PTZ withdrawal. Time series of microarray expression profiles of heads of flies treated with PTZ for 12 hrs (beginning phase), two days (latent phase) and seven days (behaviorally expressive phase) showed only down-, not up-, regulation of genes; expression of 23, 2439 and 265 genes were downregulated, in that order. GO biological process enrichment analysis showed downregulation of transcription, neuron morphogenesis during differentiation, synaptic transmission, regulation of neurotransmitter levels, neurogenesis, axonogenesis, protein modification, axon guidance, actin filament organization etc. in the latent phase and of glutamate metabolism, cell communication etc. in the expressive phase. Proteomic interactome based analysis provided further directionality to these events. Pathway overrepresentation analysis showed enrichment of Wnt signaling and other associated pathways in genes downregulated by PTZ. Mining of available transcriptomic and proteomic data pertaining to established rodent models of epilepsy and human epileptic patients showed overrepresentation of epilepsy associated genes in our PTZ regulated set. CONCLUSION: Systems biology ultimately aims at delineating and comprehending the functioning of complex biological systems in such details that predictive models of human diseases could be developed. Due to immense complexity of higher organisms, systems biology approaches are however currently focused on simpler organisms. Amenable to modeling, our model offers a unique opportunity to further dissect epileptogenesis-like plasticity and to unravel mechanisms of long-term action of AEDs relevant in neuropsychiatric disorders.
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spelling pubmed-26577752009-03-19 A Drosophila systems model of pentylenetetrazole induced locomotor plasticity responsive to antiepileptic drugs Mohammad, Farhan Singh, Priyanka Sharma, Abhay BMC Syst Biol Research Article BACKGROUND: Rodent kindling induced by PTZ is a widely used model of epileptogenesis and AED testing. Overlapping pathophysiological mechanisms may underlie epileptogenesis and other neuropsychiatric conditions. Besides epilepsy, AEDs are widely used in treating various neuropsychiatric disorders. Mechanisms of AEDs' long term action in these disorders are poorly understood. We describe here a Drosophila systems model of PTZ induced locomotor plasticity that is responsive to AEDs. RESULTS: We empirically determined a regime in which seven days of PTZ treatment and seven days of subsequent PTZ discontinuation respectively cause a decrease and an increase in climbing speed of Drosophila adults. Concomitant treatment with NaVP and LEV, not ETH, GBP and VGB, suppressed the development of locomotor deficit at the end of chronic PTZ phase. Concomitant LEV also ameliorated locomotor alteration that develops after PTZ withdrawal. Time series of microarray expression profiles of heads of flies treated with PTZ for 12 hrs (beginning phase), two days (latent phase) and seven days (behaviorally expressive phase) showed only down-, not up-, regulation of genes; expression of 23, 2439 and 265 genes were downregulated, in that order. GO biological process enrichment analysis showed downregulation of transcription, neuron morphogenesis during differentiation, synaptic transmission, regulation of neurotransmitter levels, neurogenesis, axonogenesis, protein modification, axon guidance, actin filament organization etc. in the latent phase and of glutamate metabolism, cell communication etc. in the expressive phase. Proteomic interactome based analysis provided further directionality to these events. Pathway overrepresentation analysis showed enrichment of Wnt signaling and other associated pathways in genes downregulated by PTZ. Mining of available transcriptomic and proteomic data pertaining to established rodent models of epilepsy and human epileptic patients showed overrepresentation of epilepsy associated genes in our PTZ regulated set. CONCLUSION: Systems biology ultimately aims at delineating and comprehending the functioning of complex biological systems in such details that predictive models of human diseases could be developed. Due to immense complexity of higher organisms, systems biology approaches are however currently focused on simpler organisms. Amenable to modeling, our model offers a unique opportunity to further dissect epileptogenesis-like plasticity and to unravel mechanisms of long-term action of AEDs relevant in neuropsychiatric disorders. BioMed Central 2009-01-21 /pmc/articles/PMC2657775/ /pubmed/19154620 http://dx.doi.org/10.1186/1752-0509-3-11 Text en Copyright © 2009 Mohammad et al; licensee BioMed Central Ltd. http://creativecommons.org/licenses/by/2.0 This is an Open Access article distributed under the terms of the Creative Commons Attribution License ( (http://creativecommons.org/licenses/by/2.0) ), which permits unrestricted use, distribution, and reproduction in any medium, provided the original work is properly cited.
spellingShingle Research Article
Mohammad, Farhan
Singh, Priyanka
Sharma, Abhay
A Drosophila systems model of pentylenetetrazole induced locomotor plasticity responsive to antiepileptic drugs
title A Drosophila systems model of pentylenetetrazole induced locomotor plasticity responsive to antiepileptic drugs
title_full A Drosophila systems model of pentylenetetrazole induced locomotor plasticity responsive to antiepileptic drugs
title_fullStr A Drosophila systems model of pentylenetetrazole induced locomotor plasticity responsive to antiepileptic drugs
title_full_unstemmed A Drosophila systems model of pentylenetetrazole induced locomotor plasticity responsive to antiepileptic drugs
title_short A Drosophila systems model of pentylenetetrazole induced locomotor plasticity responsive to antiepileptic drugs
title_sort drosophila systems model of pentylenetetrazole induced locomotor plasticity responsive to antiepileptic drugs
topic Research Article
url https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pmc/articles/PMC2657775/
https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pubmed/19154620
http://dx.doi.org/10.1186/1752-0509-3-11
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