| Different types of   epilepsy may be found in nearly 1 % of population. Many epileptic syndromes
  originate during infancy and childhood and there are some age-specific
  syndromes demonstrating the influence of the level of brain maturation on
  generation, spread, arrest and consequences of epileptic seizures. Therefore,
  the main topics of the laboratory are epileptic seizures and epilepsies
  induced at different levels of postnatal development. Methods used in the
  laboratory include electrophysiology (acute and long term EEG recording,
  video-EEG monitoring, evoked potentials, electrical stimulation of different
  brain structures, activity of individual neurons), behavior (spontaneous
  behavior in open field, learning and memory tests), tests of motor
  performance, biochemistry, classical histology, histochemistry and
  immunohistochemistry. In collaboration with other laboratories molecular
  biology techniques are used. In addition, there is research in the field of
  computational neuroscience
 Resarch is focused on the following topics
 
 Status epilepticus
  as a life-threatening situation is modeled in adult as well as in developing
  rats. Status is induced by pilocarpine in lithiumpretreated animals at the age
  of 12, 25 or 90 days. video-EEG monitoring demonstrated that treatment with
  benzodiazepines and/or paraldehyde did not block but only interrupted seizures
  in all age groups. Epileptic EEG activity (mostly without motor correlates)
  reappears after a few tens of minutes and continues for at least 24 h. In
  contrast to older rats the youngest group exhibit frequently nongeneralized
  EEG seizures. Status epilepticus in immature brain is manifested in a little
  different way than in mature brain but the amount of epileptic activity is
  large enough to lead to permanent changes of the nervous system. Low doses of
  pilocarpine induce nonconvulsive seizures lasting approximately 90 minutes.
  Behavioral and EEG symptomatology of these seizures correspond with human
  complex partial seizures, i.e. our model is related to human nonconvulsive
  status epilepticus. These seizures can be elicited in all three age groups
  tested.
 
 Spontaneous recurrent seizures which appear as a consequence of motor
  status epilepticus after a latent (silent) period represent a model of
  epilepsy because seizures appear repeatedly for the rest of life of the
  animals. Using the pilocarpine model of convulsive status epilepticus
  pathologic EEG activity (isolated spikes) can be recorded in all rats without
  any relationship to the age when status epilepticus was elicited. In contrast,
  ictal activity and especially convulsive, i.e. motor seizures are age-dependent;
  they regularly appeared when the animals have been seized during adulthood or,
  less regularly, at the age of 25 days.
 
 Consequences of epileptic seizures during development are studied also behaviorally and morphologically.
  Convulsive status epilepticus during early development resulted in compromised
  motor development of rats (tested by a battery of tests on motor performance)
  and the changes are age-dependent, they have different time course in animals
  seized at the age of 12 or 25 days. Spatial memory task (Morris water maze)
  examined two months after status cannot be mastered by rats seized during
  adulthood, animals undergoing convulsive status at the age of 25 days learn
  more slowly than their control littermates but the youngest group do not
  exhibit any changes in comparison to controls. Spontaneous behavior in open
  field is characterized by a marked hyperactivity of all groups of animals
  after status. Both older age groups exhibit serious widespread brain damage
  seen in Nissl-stained brain sections – not only in the limbic system but
  also in neocortex, some thalamic nuclei and other structures. No obvious
  neuronal necrosis is present in rats seized at the age of 12 days but if
  immunohistochemical techniques are used, marked changes can be demonstrated
  even in this age group (e.g.loss of parvalbumin and calbindin positivity in
  piriform cortex). The findings lead us to a conclusion that motor status
  epilepticus is deleterious also for immature brain but its consequences differ
  from those in older animals. Nonconvulsive status epilepticus induced in adult
  rats resulted in morphological changes in motor neocortical area, i.e. even
  these innocent-looking seizures lead to longlasting changes in the brain.
 
 The role of endogenous excitatory amino acids in the pathogenesis of
  epileptic seizures is investigated in immature rats, using systemic and
  intracerebroventricular administration of homocysteic acid. In addition to
  behavioral and EEG description of seizures, energy metabolite changes are
  studied. The findings suggest that the immature rat brain has   a high ability to compensate for the increased energy demands
  associated with seizure activity, most likely due to increased glycolysis.
  Seizures could be attenuated or prevented by antagonists of both NMDA and
  nonNMDA receptors and by metabotropic glutamate receptor subtypes of selective
  agists and antagonists, as evaluated by suppression of behavioral
  manifestations of seizures and also from the protection of metabolite changes
  which normally accompany these seizures. A pronounced anticonvulsant effect
  could be achieved by combined treatment with subthreshold doses of NMDA and
  nonNMDA receptor antagonists. This finding may be of potential significance
  for treatment of epilepsies.
 
 The role of GABAergic inhibition in epileptogenesis in developing brain
  is mainly focused on the GABA-B system. An antagonist of GABA-B receptors CGP
  35348 is able to suppress rhythmic spike-and-wave activity at all
  developmental stages where this activity could be evoked. In contrast,
  baclofen increased the incidence of spike-and-wave episodes in an age-dependent
  manner (from the fourth postnatal week). The GABA-B receptors participate in
  postictal depression after cortical epileptic afterdischarges. Development of
  Gproteins and adenylyl cyclase activity is studied in collaboration with the
  Department of Membrane Receptor Biochemistry. Glutamate decarboxylase activity
  is studied biochemically (in collaboration with the Faculty of Pharmacy,
  Charles University) and immunohistochemically. These studies are directed to
  possible changes induced by severe seizure activity. Molecular biology of GABA-B
  receptors is studied in the Laboratory of Molecular Physiology, a joint
  laboratory with the 3rd Medical School. The
  main topic is represented by the structure-function relationship of the
  metabotropic glutamate receptors and the GABA-B receptors. These G-protein-
  coupled receptors have certain similarities with other heptahelical receptors,
  but also many differences. Mutagenesis studies together with functional tests
  of heterologously expressed mutated proteins allow us to map contact sites of
  G-proteins with the receptors. Heterodimerization of BR1 and BR2 subunits of
  the GABA-B receptor is studied using protein chemistry and immunochemitry with
  the aim to disclose possible interaction sites that take parts in the receptor
  formation.
 
 Action of antiepileptic drugs against different seizure models is studied during development. Two common
  models are motor seizures elicited by pentamethylenetetrazol administration
  and epileptic afterdischarges induced by rhythmic electrical stimulation of
  the sensorimotor area of cerebral cortex. These models make it possible to
  evaluate three or four different phenomena with known mechanisms of generation.
  There are not only quantitative but also qualitative changes of antiepileptic
  drug action with maturation of the brain - e.g.mixed GABA-A and GABA-B agonist
  progabide and GABA uptake blockers (NNC 711 and tiagabine) exhibit different
  action against generalized motor seizures in rats during the first three
  postnatal weeks and in adult animals. Ontogenetic changes in the action of
  phenytoin were demonstrated also electrophysiologically by means of evoked
  potentials. These results have not only theoretical but also direct practical
  significance.
 
 In addition, mathematical analysis and modeling is focused on the information transfer from the input to a neuron
  to its output. This concerns either the first-order sensory neurons which are
  in direct contact with an external environment or neurons of higher orders
  receiving their input as integrated activity in a neuronal network. The main
  attention is oriented towards the sensory systems, mainly the olfactory one,
  however, due to the application of theoretical approaches closely related to
  experimental data, the results are of general validity. Methodologically, this
  is the type of computational neuroscience research using biophysical,
  mathematical and numerical tools.
 Publications |