Cell Reports (Feb 2025)

Distinct changes to hippocampal and medial entorhinal circuits emerge across the progression of cognitive deficits in epilepsy

  • Yu Feng,
  • Keziah S. Diego,
  • Zhe Dong,
  • Zoé Christenson Wick,
  • Lucia Page-Harley,
  • Veronica Page-Harley,
  • Julia Schnipper,
  • Sophia I. Lamsifer,
  • Zachary T. Pennington,
  • Lauren M. Vetere,
  • Paul A. Philipsberg,
  • Ivan Soler,
  • Albert Jurkowski,
  • Christin J. Rosado,
  • Nadia N. Khan,
  • Denise J. Cai,
  • Tristan Shuman

Journal volume & issue
Vol. 44, no. 2
p. 115131

Abstract

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Summary: Temporal lobe epilepsy (TLE) causes pervasive and progressive memory impairments, yet the specific circuit changes that drive these deficits remain unclear. To investigate how hippocampal-entorhinal dysfunction contributes to progressive memory deficits in epilepsy, we performed simultaneous in vivo electrophysiology in the hippocampus (HPC) and medial entorhinal cortex (MEC) of control and epileptic mice 3 or 8 weeks after pilocarpine-induced status epilepticus (Pilo-SE). We found that HPC synchronization deficits (including reduced theta power, coherence, and altered interneuron spike timing) emerged within 3 weeks of Pilo-SE, aligning with early-onset, relatively subtle memory deficits. In contrast, abnormal synchronization within the MEC and between HPC and MEC emerged later, by 8 weeks after Pilo-SE, when spatial memory impairment was more severe. Furthermore, a distinct subpopulation of MEC layer 3 excitatory neurons (active at theta troughs) was specifically impaired in epileptic mice. Together, these findings suggest that hippocampal-entorhinal circuit dysfunction accumulates and shifts as cognitive impairment progresses in TLE.

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