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We are presenting at NeuroEng 2008 |
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Written by Evan Thomas
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Thursday, 09 October 2008 10:19 |
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Steve and Evan are presenting at the 3rd Australian Workshop on Mathematical and Computational Neuroscience. The titles are: - The consequences of epilepsy causing ion channel mutations in the dentate gyrus by Evan Alexander Thomas, Chris Alan Reid and Steven Petrou
- 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
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Last Updated on Thursday, 09 October 2008 13:35 |
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Written by Evan Thomas
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Thursday, 09 October 2008 10:16 |
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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 |
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Last Updated on Thursday, 09 October 2008 13:35 |
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