Inhibition of CKAMP44 attenuated seizure activity via protein phosphatase 3 regulatory subunit B-mediated GluA1 phosphorylation and synaptic transmission

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Inhibition of CKAMP44 attenuated seizure activity via protein phosphatase 3 regulatory subunit B-mediated GluA1 phosphorylation and synaptic transmission

Authors

Huang, L.; Chen, S.; Guo, H.; Zhang, H.; Wang, L.; Wang, X.; Guo, Y.; Yuan, S.; Luo, J.; Lv, Y.; Yu, W.

Abstract

Abstract Temporal lobe epilepsy (TLE) is a complex neurological disorder characterized by spontaneous recurrent seizures and its underlying mechanism remains elusive. This study aimed to investigate the role of cystine-knot AMPAR modulating protein 44 (CKAMP44) in the pathological process of TLE and its potential as a therapeutic target using kainic acid (KA)-induced epilepsy mouse model of TLE. Our results showed that CKAMP44 protein and mRNA expression was significantly increased and primarily localized to neurons during the chronic phase of TLE. Nkx2-1 regulated the transcription of CKAMP44 in the hippocampus brain tissues of KA-induced TLE mice. Inhibition of CKAMP44 suppressed seizure susceptibility and severity in the KA-induced epilepsy mice via behavioral and local field potential monitoring. Furthermore, inhibition of CKAMP44 decreased frequency and amplitudes of spontaneous excitatory postsynaptic currents indicating that the excitatory synaptic transmission was reduced in an in vitro epilepsy model. Mechanistically, inhibition of CKAMP44 specifically upregulated the membrane surface expression of GluA1 and the phosphorylation level of GluA1-ser831 by downregulating protein phosphatase 3 regulatory subunit B(PPP3r2) expression. Overexpression of PPP3r2 downregulated the phosphorylation level and surface expression of GluA1, which ultimately exacerbated the seizure activity suppressed by CKAMP44 knockdown. Collectively, our results indicate that CKAMP44 may be a potential therapeutic target for the treatment of TLE.

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