Objetivo
This proposal focuses on a human disease: epilepsy of the temporal lobe. This syndrome has a relatively stereotyped history. Focal seizures emerge, with a delay of several years in the human, after an initial insult that results in neuronal death. We will use physiology, imaging, anatomy and transcriptomic techniques to ask how an epileptic brain emerges, to define different neuronal cell types in the basal epileptic state and to examine factors associated with the paroxysmal transition to a seizure. Specifically we will ask whether a loss of cholesterol homeostasis is involved in the initial sclerotic neuronal death. We will ask whether proteoglycans deposited in the extracellular space as a generalised wound healing response force the establishment of aberrant synaptic contacts and so facilitate the slow process of epileptogenesis. We will then study the basal state of an epileptic brain. We will establish the physiology, anatomy, connectivity and transcriptome of functionally distinct neurons defined by different contributions to epileptiform activities in human epileptic brain slices. Finally we will seek to establish what sudden changes in field potential, ionic homeostasis, cellular firing and synaptic interactions are associated with the paroxysmal moment of transition to seizure.
Ámbito científico
Convocatoria de propuestas
ERC-2012-ADG_20120314
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Régimen de financiación
ERC-AG - ERC Advanced GrantInstitución de acogida
75013 Paris
Francia