Transition behavior of the seizure dynamics modulated by the astrocyte inositol triphosphate noise

26 May 2021  ·  Jiajia Li, Peihua Feng, Liang Zhao, Junying Chen, Mengmeng Du, Yangyang Yu, Jian Song, Ying Wu ·

Epilepsy is a neurological disorder with recurrent seizures of complexity and randomness. Until now, the mechanism of epileptic randomness has not been fully elucidated. Inspired by the recent finding that astrocyte GTPase-activating protein (G-protein)-coupled receptors could be involved in stochastic epileptic seizures, we proposed a neuron-astrocyte network model, incorporating the noise of the astrocytic second messager, inositol triphosphate (IP3) which is modulated by the G-protein)-coupled receptor activation. Based on this model, we have statistically analysed the transitions of epileptic seizures by performing tens of simulation trials. Our simulation results show that the increase of the IP3 noise intensity induces the depolarization-block epileptic seizures together with an increase in neuronal firing frequency. Meanwhile, a bistable state of neuronal firing emerges under certain noise intensity, during which the neuronal firing pattern switches between regular sparse spiking and epileptic seizure states. This random presence of epileptic seizures is absent when the noise intensity continues to increase, accompanying with an increase in the epileptic depolarization block duration. The simulation results also shed light on the fact that calcium signals in astrocytes play significant roles in the pattern formations of the epileptic seizure. Our results provide a potential pathway for understanding the epileptic randomness.

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