Neurobiology of Disease (Feb 2020)
Ex vivo multi-electrode analysis reveals spatiotemporal dynamics of ictal behavior at the infiltrated margin of glioma
Abstract
The purpose of this study is to develop a platform in which the cellular and molecular underpinnings of chronic focal neocortical lesional epilepsy can be explored and use it to characterize seizure-like events (SLEs) in an ex vivo model of infiltrating high-grade glioma. Microelectrode arrays were used to study electrophysiologic changes in ex vivo acute brain slices from a PTEN/p53 deleted, PDGF-B driven mouse model of high-grade glioma. Electrode locations were co-registered to the underlying histology to ascertain the influence of the varying histologic landscape on the observed electrophysiologic changes. Peritumoral, infiltrated, and tumor sites were sampled in tumor-bearing slices. Following the addition of zero Mg2+ solution, all three histologic regions in tumor-bearing slices showed significantly greater increases in firing rates when compared to the control sites. Tumor-bearing slices demonstrated increased proclivity for SLEs, with 40 events in tumor-bearing slices and 5 events in control slices (p-value = .0105). Observed SLEs were characterized by either low voltage fast (LVF) onset patterns or short bursts of repetitive widespread, high amplitude low frequency discharges. Seizure foci comprised areas from all three histologic regions. The onset electrode was found to be at the infiltrated margin in 50% of cases and in the peritumoral region in 36.9% of cases. These findings reveal a landscape of histopathologic and electrophysiologic alterations associated with ictogenesis and spread of tumor-associated seizures.