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We are presenting at NeuroEng 2008 PDF Print E-mail
Written by Evan Thomas   
Thursday, 09 October 2008 10:19

Steve and Evan are presenting at the 3rd Australian Workshop on Mathematical and Computational Neuroscience. The titles are:

 

  1.  The consequences of epilepsy causing ion channel mutations in the dentate gyrus by Evan Alexander Thomas, Chris Alan Reid and Steven Petrou
  2. Using modelling to indentify the sodium channel subunit involved in neuropathic pain by Evan Alexander Thomas, Herjend Teny, Chin Kiong Quek, Fan Yahua, Wang Ying and Steven Petrou

 

Last Updated on Thursday, 09 October 2008 13:35
 
Congratulations Cindy! PDF Print E-mail
Written by Evan Thomas   
Thursday, 09 October 2008 10:16

Cindy's paper has come out!

Chiu C, Reid CA, Tan HO, Davies PJ, Single FN, Koukoulas I, Berkovic SF, Tan SS, Sprengel R, Jones MV, Petrou S. Developmental impact of a familial GABAA receptor epilepsy mutation. Ann Neurol. 2008 Sep;64(3):284-93. 

OBJECTIVE: A major goal of epilepsy research is to understand the molecular and functional basis of seizure genesis. A human GABA(A) gamma2 gene mutation (R43Q) is associated with generalized epilepsy. Introduction of this mutation into a mouse by gene targeting recapitulates the human phenotype demonstrating a strong genotype to phenotype link. GABA(A) receptors play a role in the moment-to-moment control of brain function and also on the long-term wiring of the brain by directing neuronal development. Our objective was to determine whether developmental expression of the mutation alters seizure susceptibility later in life. METHODS: A tetracycline-based conditional model for activation of a hypomorphic Q43 disease allele was created and validated. Seizure susceptibility was assessed using the subcutaneous pentylenetetrazole model. RESULTS: Seizure susceptibility was significantly reduced in mice where the Q43 allele was suppressed during development. INTERPRETATION: These results demonstrate that a human epilepsy-causing mutation impacts network stability during a critical developmental period. These data suggest that identification of presymptomatic children may provide a window for therapeutic intervention before overt symptoms are observed, potentially altering the course of epileptogenesis 

Last Updated on Thursday, 09 October 2008 13:35
 
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