Peer-reviewed veterinary case report
A molecular study of hippocampus in dogs with convulsion during canine distemper virus encephalitis.
- Journal:
- Brain research
- Year:
- 2006
- Authors:
- D'Intino, Giulia et al.
- Affiliation:
- Department of Veterinary Morphophysiology and Animal Production · Italy
- Species:
- dog
Plain-English summary
This study looked at six dogs that had seizures due to a brain infection caused by the canine distemper virus (CDV). These dogs experienced severe and uncontrollable seizures, along with other neurological issues like abnormal behavior and movement problems. Researchers compared their brain tissue to that of five control dogs that did not have seizures. They found changes in certain proteins and receptors in the brain that are linked to seizure activity. This research suggests that some of the same biological changes seen in experimental models of seizures also happen in dogs with natural seizure disorders.
Abstract
In this study, we have investigated the expression of the nuclear transcription factor (c-Fos, NFkB), growth factors (nerve growth factor--NGF, brain-derived neurotrophic factor--BDNF), peptides (enkephalin, galanin) and glutamate transporter (AA 504-523 rat EAAC1) in 6 dogs sacrificed immediately after seizure attack during encephalomyelitis due to canine distemper virus (CDV) (as assessed by clinical examination, RT-PCR and viral RNA detection either in blood or brain tissue and CDV immunohistochemistry in brain slices). In all these CDV affected dogs, the observed neurological signs included untreatable seizures, leading to cluster seizure activity and status epilepticus. In the inter-ictal phase abnormal mentation, postural and gait deficits and sometimes involuntary movements such as myoclonus were recorded. The same investigation was carried out in 5 control dogs affected by different disorders, all characterized by the absence of seizures. Brains were dissected out immediately after euthanasia and fixed; sections collected from the dorsal hippocampus were processed for immunohistochemistry. By comparing hippocampus sections obtained from dog with and without seizure, the following regulations were observed. A strong up-regulation of glutamate transporter throughout the cell layers was found together with the onset of nuclear Fos and NFkB-IR in the pyramidal cell layer X. Among the investigated peptides, we observed a slight increase in enkephalinergic fibers and a strong up-regulation of mu-opioid receptors, whereas galanin-IR seemed to be weaker. Finally, both NGF and BDNF expression was strongly up-regulated. BDNF-IR was mainly localized in the apical dendrite in pyramidal neurons. To our knowledge, these data offer the first indication that molecular events described in experimental kindling also occur during spontaneous pathology in animal species sharing close similarities to human neuropathology.
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Search related cases →Original publication: https://pubmed.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/16765333/