HB-EGF activates EGFR to induce reactive neural stem cells in the mouse hippocampus after seizures
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2024-09Autor
Pastor Alonso, Oier
Durá, Irene
Bernardo Castro, Sara
Varea, Emilio
Muro García, Teresa
Martín Suárez, Soraya
Encinas Pérez, Juan Manuel
Pineda Martí, Jose Ramón
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Life science alliance 7(9) : (2024) // Article ID e202201840
Resumen
Hippocampal seizures mimicking mesial temporal lobe epilepsy cause a profound disruption of the adult neurogenic niche in mice. Seizures provoke neural stem cells to switch to a reactive phenotype (reactive neural stem cells, React-NSCs) characterized by multibranched hypertrophic morphology, massive activation to enter mitosis, symmetric division, and final differentiation into reactive astrocytes. As a result, neurogenesis is chronically impaired. Here, using a mouse model of mesial temporal lobe epilepsy, we show that the epidermal growth factor receptor (EGFR) signaling pathway is key for the induction of React-NSCs and that its inhibition exerts a beneficial effect on the neurogenic niche. We show that during the initial days after the induction of seizures by a single intrahippocampal injection of kainic acid, a strong release of zinc and heparin-binding epidermal growth factor, both activators of the EGFR signaling pathway in neural stem cells, is produced. Administration of the EGFR inhibitor gefitinib, a chemotherapeutic in clinical phase IV, prevents the induction of React-NSCs and preserves neurogenesis.