In most patients, epilepsy arises due to various initial precipitating injuries during the developmental stages. A major challenge in the neuroscience and neuroclinical fields is understanding how this precipitating injury produces a persistent reorganization of the brain's neural network, thereby transforming the normal brain into epileptogenesis. Identifying the pathological basis of epileptic seizure may lay the foundation for the development of new anti-epileptic drugs, benefiting 60 million people with epilepsy worldwide. This is why our editors chose the theme “The Developmental Seizure-Induced Hippocampal Mossy Fiber Sprouting: Target for Epilepsy Therapies?”
By using transgenic mice expressing the cell-killer gene thymidine kinase in granulosa cell progenitors or through a diphtheria toxin receptor expression strategy, newborn granule cell ablation can significantly reduce the frequency of seizures but has no effect on Mossy Fiber Sprouting (MFS) (1, 2). MFS develops independently of the loss of mossy fiber targets, and its presence is not necessarily associated with the development of spontaneous seizures [(3, 4); Cavarsan et al.]. The development of mossy fiber sprouting may be associated with epilepsy comorbidities rather than with seizure incidence. For example, people with mesial temporal lobe epilepsy (mTLE) and depression show more sprouting than those with only mTLE [(5); Godale and Danzer].
MFS is an active phenomenon, and possibly a normal adaptive mechanism that is reversible, which might be related to the replacement or restoration of lost synaptic contacts rather than to the formation of recurrent excitatory circuits in dentate granule cells [(6–8); Cavarsan et al.; Koyama and Ikegaya]. A 4-week zinc-deficient diet exacerbated MFS caused by developmental seizures, accompanied by cognitive deficits and reduced seizure thresholds. In contrast, zinc supplementation for 4 weeks significantly reduced MFS and improved the above-mentioned damage-related changes. Mitophagy-mediated zinc homeostasis via mitochondrial activation may be a potential mechanism [(9); Jin et al.; Li et al.].
This Research Topic collects seven articles: four animal studies (including one in vitro study) and three reviews. With respect to the demographics of this Research Topic collection, the corresponding authors are from Japan, the United States, Canada, Brazil, South Korea, and China. We hope that the information gathered from this topic will help promote post-epilepsy MFS study and help promote clinical translational medical research to better prevent and treat these injuries in the near future.
Statements
Author contributions
HN wrote the draft. TK, BN, and CH reviewed the manuscript.
Funding
This work was supported by the National Natural Science Foundation of China (81871024 and 81471337) and the key talent's subsidy project in science and education of Department of Public Health of Jiangsu Province (ZDRCC2016008).
Conflict of interest
BN was employed by the company Expesicor Inc. The remaining authors declare that the research was conducted in the absence of any commercial or financial relationships that could be construed as a potential conflict of interest.
References
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Summary
Keywords
mossy fiber sprouting, epilepsy, hippocampus, dentate gyrus, therapies
Citation
Ni H, Kirschstein T, Norwood BA and Hsieh CL (2019) Editorial: The Developmental Seizure-Induced Hippocampal Mossy Fiber Sprouting: Target for Epilepsy Therapies?. Front. Neurol. 10:1212. doi: 10.3389/fneur.2019.01212
Received
16 October 2019
Accepted
30 October 2019
Published
13 November 2019
Volume
10 - 2019
Edited and reviewed by
Fernando Cendes, Campinas State University, Brazil
Updates
Copyright
© 2019 Ni, Kirschstein, Norwood and Hsieh.
This is an open-access article distributed under the terms of the Creative Commons Attribution License (CC BY). The use, distribution or reproduction in other forums is permitted, provided the original author(s) and the copyright owner(s) are credited and that the original publication in this journal is cited, in accordance with accepted academic practice. No use, distribution or reproduction is permitted which does not comply with these terms.
*Correspondence: Hong Ni nhdoctor@163.com
This article was submitted to Epilepsy, a section of the journal Frontiers in Neurology
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