Royal College of Surgeons in Ireland
Browse
An investigation into the expression, content and function of exosomes in an experimental model of epilepsy.pdf (5.79 MB)

An investigation into the expression, content and function of exosomes in an experimental model of epilepsy

Download (5.79 MB)
thesis
posted on 2020-08-05, 09:45 authored by Aasia Batool
Epilepsy is a serious neurological disease characterised by recurrent unprovoked seizures affecting 65 million people worldwide. Current anti-epileptic therapies target only symptomatic seizures and are not fully effective in ameliorating disease pathophysiology. Temporal lobe epilepsy is the most common form of epilepsy in adults and a third of temporal lobe epilepsy patients are drug refractory, and the underlying pathophysiology remains to be fully elucidated. Recent work revealed microRNAs serve important functions in cells, in post-transcriptional regulation of genes associated with altered neuronal structure, inflammation and cell death. All of which are pathological hallmarks of epilepsy. While the site of these effects is assumed to be intracellular, exosomes have recently emerged as carriers of microRNAs between cells. Exosome-carried microRNAs may represent a novel mechanism of cell-to-cell communication within the brain, both in health and disease states. The motivation for the studies was to identify whether status epilepticus and/or chronic epilepsy is associated with the formation of unique exosome profiles that are distinct from controls.
Here, the intra-amygdala kainic acid model of status epilepticus was used to carry out most studies in mice. Messenger RNA and protein levels of various genes involved in exosome biogenesis pathway were analysed at key timepoints in our mouse model of epilepsy. This analysis revealed a time and brain region specific regulation of exosome biogenesis components in epilepsy. In particular, significant changes were found in the dentate gyrus of the hippocampus. The results suggested a role for this process in pathogenesis and maintenance of the epileptic state. To investigate this, two protocols were established within our team for isolating exosomes from brain tissue; a filtration and centrifugation protocol, and one using a commercial precipitation kit. Successful exosome-enriched fractions were confirmed by protein markers, zetasizer and electron microscopy.
Furthermore, RNA Sequencing was carried out to characterise microRNA content in control versus mouse epileptic tissue. A set of microRNAs were found common to exosomes within the brain regardless of method of extraction. Detected were both neuron- and glia- enriched microRNAs within isolated exosomes. We determined that several miRNAs within exosome-enriched fractions were differentially expressed during epileptogenesis and experimental epilepsy such as miR-21a-3p, miR-21a-5p and miR-146a-5p. By comparing to data already obtained within our team, differential expression highlighted in these
exosome-enriched fractions mainly reflected what was happening at the whole hippocampal level at 24 hours and at 2 weeks.
In addition, results show successful attenuation of exosome production in vivo as judged by reduction in surrogate markers of extracellular vesicles (Alix and Flotillin1). This reduction in protein by exosome production-inhibitors GW4869 and cambinol was brought forward to final functional study to investigate if exosome release following status epilepticus plays a causal role in the pathogenesis of experimental temporal lobe epilepsy and subsequent development of recurrent seizures.
In summary, the thesis was an investigation into the expression, content and function of exosomes in an experimental model of epilepsy. We identified time and region specific changes in the biogenesis pathway of exosomes and demonstrated that exosome-enriched fractions contain microRNAs which are differentially expressed in epileptogenesis and in epilepsy. Finally, we managed to attenuate expression levels of exosome-related proteins in vivo in order to later examine the effect on the epileptic state.

History

First Supervisor

Prof. David C. Henshall

Comments

A thesis submitted for the degree of Doctor of Philosophy from the Royal College of Surgeons in Ireland in 2019.

Published Citation

Batool A. An investigation into the expression, content and function of exosomes in an experimental model of epilepsy. [PhD Thesis]. Dublin: Royal College of Surgeons in Ireland; 2019.

Degree Name

  • Doctor of Philosophy (PhD)

Date of award

2019-06-30

Programme

  • Doctor of Philosophy (PhD)

Usage metrics

    Theses and Dissertations

    Exports

    RefWorks
    BibTeX
    Ref. manager
    Endnote
    DataCite
    NLM
    DC