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Heiland 2023 MicroRNA-335-5p suppresses voltage-gated sodium channel expression and may be a.pdf (1.93 MB)

MicroRNA-335-5p suppresses voltage-gated sodium channel expression and may be a target for seizure control

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posted on 2023-12-22, 10:01 authored by Mona HeilandMona Heiland, Niamh ConnollyNiamh Connolly, Omar MamadOmar Mamad, Ngoc Thanh Nguyen, Jaideep Cherakka KesavanJaideep Cherakka Kesavan, Elena Langa, Kevin Fanning, Albert Sanfeliu BoschAlbert Sanfeliu Bosch, Yan Yan, Junyi Sun, Morten T. Venø, Lara S. Costard, Valentin Neubert, Tobias EngelTobias Engel, Thomas D. M. Hill, Thomas M. Freiman, Arun Mahesh, Vijay K. Tiwari, Felix Rosenow, Sebastian Bauer, Jørgen Kjems, Gareth Morris, David HenshallDavid Henshall
There remains an urgent need for new therapies for treatment-resistant epilepsy. Sodium channel blockers are effective for seizure control in common forms of epilepsy, but loss of sodium channel function underlies some genetic forms of epilepsy. Approaches that provide bidirectional control of sodium channel expression are needed. MicroRNAs (miRNA) are small noncoding RNAs which negatively regulate gene expression. Here we show that genome-wide miRNA screening of hippocampal tissue from a rat epilepsy model, mice treated with the antiseizure medicine cannabidiol, and plasma from patients with treatment-resistant epilepsy, converge on a single target—miR-335-5p. Pathway analysis on predicted and validated miR-335-5p targets identified multiple voltage-gated sodium channels (VGSCs). Intracerebroventricular injection of antisense oligonucleotides against miR-335-5p resulted in upregulation of Scn1a, Scn2a, and Scn3a in the mouse brain and an increased action potential rising phase and greater excitability of hippocampal pyramidal neurons in brain slice recordings, consistent with VGSCs as functional targets of miR-335-5p. Blocking miR-335-5p also increased voltage-gated sodium currents and SCN1A, SCN2A, and SCN3A expression in human induced pluripotent stem cell-derived neurons. Inhibition of miR-335-5p increased susceptibility to tonic-clonic seizures in the pentylenetetrazol seizure model, whereas adeno-associated virus 9-mediated overexpression of miR-335-5p reduced seizure severity and improved survival. These studies suggest modulation of miR-335-5p may be a means to regulate VGSCs and affect neuronal excitability and seizures. Changes to miR-335-5p may reflect compensatory mechanisms to control excitability and could provide biomarker or therapeutic strategies for different types of treatment-resistant epilepsy.

Funding

Science Foundation Ireland (SFI) under grant 16/RC/3948 (FutureNeuro)

European Union’s “Seventh Framework” Programme (FP7) under Grant Agreement 602130 (EpimiRNA)

Wellcome Trust (222648/Z/21/Z)

Higher Education Authority (HEA), Department of Further and Higher Education, Research, Innovation & Science (DFHERIS)

Shared Island Fund (SeeDeepER)

European Union (MSCA-IF-2018 840262)

Epilepsy Research UK (F2102 Morris)

Royal Society (RGS\R2\222326)

SFI award 17/CDA/4708

History

Data Availability Statement

The sequencing and iCLIP data reported in this paper have been deposited to the gene expression omnibus (GEO) under accession number GSE214355 (82) (Argonaute2 sequencing of hippocampal subfields from rat PPS epilepsy model), GSE214761 (83) (CBD small RNA sequencing), and GSE214317 (84) (Ago iCLIP of the TLE patient resected hippocampus). Custom analysis codes are available in GitHub at https://github.com/niamhconno/Heiland-et-al-2022 (85). All other data are included in the manuscript and/or supporting information.

Comments

The original article is available at https://www.pnas.org/

Published Citation

Heiland M, et al. MicroRNA-335-5p suppresses voltage-gated sodium channel expression and may be a target for seizure control. Proc Natl Acad Sci U S A. 2023;120(30):e2216658120.

Publication Date

18 July 2023

PubMed ID

37463203

Department/Unit

  • Physiology and Medical Physics
  • FutureNeuro Centre

Research Area

  • Neurological and Psychiatric Disorders

Publisher

Proceedings of the National Academy of Sciences

Version

  • Published Version (Version of Record)