Title: PS 3010 Behavioural Pharmacology lecture 3a, semester 2: 20042005
1PS 3010 Behavioural Pharmacology lecture 3a,
semester 2 2004-2005
- Epilepsy and anticonvulsants Parkinsons disease
and Huntingtons chorea. - Prof. Michael H. Joseph
- School of Psychology
2 Epilepsy
- The group of epilepsies are relatively common
neurological disorders (overall incidence 0.5-
1). - They are neurological because there is a clear
physical cause in the brain. - Generalised seizures - what is usually thought of
as an epileptic fit - are observed as clonic
movements of the limbs - may also be tonic, or sometimes only tonic.
- (this is Grand mal epilepsy)
- Patient falls to ground, loss of consciousness,
followed by period of confusion.
3What is epilepsy ?
- End 19th C. Hughlings Jackson - British
neurologist - insightful definition - -- an episodic disorder arising from excessively
synchronous and sustained discharge of a group of
neurones. - (importance in development of neuroscience).
- Development of EEG recording (1930's) allowed
this to be visualised (OHD) - 1 - normal 2 - seizure 3 - inter-ictal 4 -
recovery - Seizure episodes are classically thought of as
motor (convulsions), but depends on brain area.
4Brain areas and epilepsy
- If motor areas are involved as the fit spreads
through the brain, convulsions are seen. - Seizure activity in other areas results in
experiences reflecting the functions of those
areas, e.g. sensory, autonomic or psychic in
nature. - Each attack may develop from focal seizures
(which could be focal motor attacks, or focal
somatosensory, or psychic). - Site of origin, and direction and extent of
spread, determine form. - Alternatively, generalised convulsions may have
no clear focal origin.
5Partial (focal) seizures
- a) myoclonic seizures (localised muscle groups)
- b) absence seizures (petit mal) - very brief
- can be very frequent - c) atonic seizures
- Complex partial seizures, include temporal lobe,
psychomotor seizure with impairment of
consciousness - behavioural automatisms,
may include psychotic symptoms
6Causes of epilepsy
- Epilepsy can be idiopathic (no obvious direct
cause) its form is then most commonly
generalised seizures. - One common cause is peri-natal hypoxia.
- Epilepsy can be a result of CNS damage (trauma,
infection, tumour) its form is then most
commonly focal or partial.
7Animal models I - natural
- Audiogenic - many single-locus genetic mutations
in mice are associated with spontaneous seizures,
and/or noise induced seizures. - Photic stimulation can precipitate epileptic
attack in one breed of baboons - (from one area of Senegal).
- Idiopathic genetic epileptic disorder found in
some Beagle dogs very similar to human
idiopathic epilepsy.
8Animal models II epileptic foci
- Chronic epileptic focus can be induced by topical
application of cobalt, aluminium or iron to the
cortex. Penicillin also used topically to
produce acute experimental focus. - Also alumina paste to monkey motor cortex leads
to seizures that generalise over time. Â - These models are useful to explore the
neurobiology of epilepsy, but impractical for
routine prediction of anticonvulsant activity of
drugs, for use in humans.
9Animal models 3 - induced seizures
- Antagonism of chemically or electrically induced
seizures in animals is an accurate and widely
used effect for prediction of anticonvulsant
activity in humans. - Pentylenetetrazole (PTZ leptazol) - induced
seizures antagonism predicts drugs effective
against absence seizures - Electrically induced seizures
- - reduced duration and spread, predict drugs
against Grand Mal - - increased threshold predicts drugs effective
against absence seizures.
10Animal models IV - kindling
- Another interesting animal model for epilepsy is
kindling, to which the amygdala and hippocampus
are particularly vulnerable. - Repeated stimulation in this area, sufficient to
cause an after-discharge, but not enough for a
direct seizure, leads over several days to full
seizures following this sub-threshold stimulation
(i.e. threshold is reduced). - Maybe related to changes in glutamate receptors
similar to those occurring in LTP.
11Animal models IV - kindling and cellular
mechanisms
- Like LTP, the kindling response is blocked by
antagonists at the NMDA-glutamate receptor. - Hence the mechanism by which repeated
subthreshold stim gt seizures, and repeated
seizures gt neuronal damage, may be similar to
glutamate excitotoxicity see next. - Kindling can be induced by repeated application
of glutamate (in place of electrical
stimulation), and these approaches show
cross-sensitisation. Could be analogous to drug
sensitisation, and even to learning.
12Excitatory amino acid neurotoxicity
- Subcutaneous glutamate in mice is retinotoxic.
(Lucas Newhouse, 1957) - Systemic glutamate causes brain damage in
neonatal mice - especially arcuate nucleus of
hypothalamus. (Olney 1969) - Damage was limited to post-synaptic sites.
Thus hypothesised that damage was due to
glutamate stimulation of receptors. - Glutamate directly into brain, or kainate, an
analogue, result in neurotoxic damage to cells in
that area, but not to fibres of passage.
13Excitatory amino acid neurotoxicity and epilepsy
- This became a useful experimental lesioning tool.
- This exptl phenomenon led to speculation that
EAAs might play a role in the genesis of
neurological disorders, especially epilepsy. - Cerebral ischaemia - heart attack, stroke. gt
haemorrhage. Results after several minutes in
massive glutamate release, which can cause
excitotoxic damage, over the next few hours.
Hippocampus is especially vulnerable to this
14Excitatory amino acid neurotoxicity and epilepsy
II
- 1880 Sommer discovered an area of the
hippo-campus injured in patients suffering
recurrent or prolonged seizures (status
epilepticus). - Principal damage in pyramidal (glu) cells of CA1,
also subiculum (due to their vulnerability to
reduced oxygen). This area contains the highest
concentration of NMDA receptors in the brain. - Hence NMDA receptors implicated in both
seizure-induced and ischaemic brain damage, and
also in kindling (Meldrum, 1991).
15GABA links with epilepsy
- Focal epilepsy is characterised by spike-and-wave
in inter-ictal period. - Spike is due to excitatory inputs, and wave is
hyperpolarisation due to inhibitory actions. - Since GABA is a principal inhibitory transmitter,
reduced GABA function might be associated with
the transition from spike and wave to full blown
seizure. - 3 strategies have been used to look at this
a) differences in GABA function in brains
of epileptics b) ability of GABA drugs to
suppress or promote seizures c) involvement of
GABA in animal models of epilepsy.
16GABA links with epilepsy (a)
- GABA reported to be reduced in CSF from epileptic
patients (Wood et al). - However all patients were receiving drugs, and
reduction was seen in many neurological
conditions, only some of which (e.g.
Huntington's) are plausibly associated with
reduced GABA function in brain. - Post mortem analysis (of focal tissue after
surgical removal). GABA rises rapidly in tissue
after excision, so direct measures probably not
valid. Reductions were reported in synthetic
enzyme (GAD), and GABA receptors. Results on
reduction in degradat. enzyme (GABA-T) mixed.
- Some reports of increased Glutamate in focus
- Hence these results do not clearly support the
hypothesis of reduced GABA in brain Â
17GABA links with epilepsy (b c)
- Kindling in rats is associated with persistently
reduced GABA levels, as well as increased
glutamate, at time of seizure. - Seizures are induced experimentally
(in animals) by inhibition of GAD, which
synthesises GABA, by drugs which interfere with
the co-factor pyridoxyl-P. - They are also induced by blocking GABA receptors
directly (bicuculline), or indirectly
(allosterically) by acting on the nearby
picrotoxin site (PTZ also acts here).
18GABA links with epilepsy, anticonvulsants
- Of the widely used human anticonvulsants, BDZs
and phenobarbitone clearly act at least partly
through GABA mechanisms. - They potentiate GABA action at its chloride
channel, via distinct sites on the receptor
complex (converse of PTZ above). - Phenobarbitone Effective, but sedative, and has
abuse potential Increases GABA action at GABA-A
receptors. Phenobarbitone is preferred among
barbiturates because it has an unusually high
anticonvulsant to sedative ratio. Also effective
against focus, while BDZ effects limited to
spread.
19Anticonvulsant drugs and GABA II
- Phenobarbitone cont. Hence it may well have an
effect on the excitatory responses, as well as
enhancing gaba-mediated inhibition - Benzodiazepines Effective against spread. Drug
of choice (given i.v.) for status epilepticus.
Increases GABA action by binding at distinct site
on receptors - Valproate chemically distinct. An inhibitor of
GABA-transaminase increases GABA levels - Ethosuximide used for absence seizures petit
mal. Structurally related to barbiturates.
Mechanism unknown possibly via GABA
20Anticonvulsant drugs and GABA III
- Vigabatrin is an example of rational drug design
- aim to produce an inhibitor of GABA-T - an
analogue with double bonds - in fact it
covalently binds to the enzyme. - has been used to identify brain areas where
increased GABA may be most effective it also
protects rats from hippocampal cell loss, in an
animal model of epilepsy. - Found to increase brain GABA in animals, and
increases stimulation-induced release. Also
found to increase CSF GABA in man. - Tiagabine inhibits GABA reuptake.
21GABA and glutamate in epilepsy
- Thus there is good evidence from drug actions,
that reduced GABA function might be involved in
the triggering of convulsions, and that increased
GABA function might have the opposite effect. - However, beware the treatment/cause fallacy
that the endogenous pathology must be the
opposite of the drug action. - Also, quite a lot of evidence for Glutamate
involvement in in pathology of epilepsy.
Lamotrigine is an example of an NMDA-glutamate
antagonist which is an effective anticonvulsant.
22Other major anticonvulsant drugs
- Phenytoin (and other hydantoins)
- Widely effective, but not against absence
seizures. - Needs plasma monitoring.
- Acts on voltage-dependent sodium channels
preventing the propagation of action potentials.
They display use dependence, i.e. they block
preferentially on axons/cells that are firing
repetitively. This is done by holding the
channels in their inactivated state (reached
after strong firing) for longer. - Carbamazepine Similar effectiveness, plus good
for temporal lobe / psychomotor epilepsy.
Structurally related to tricyclic
antidepressants. Action as phenytoin also
possible actions on monoamines.
23Epilepsy and anticonvulsants conclusions
- Complex topic because there are many types of
epilepsy and of anticonvulsant drug. - Anticonvulsants may work against excessive
(glutamate) excitation, or on insufficient (GABA)
inhibition, or directly on axonal conduction. - Strangely enough, intermittent convulsions appear
to do relatively little harm to the brain
(cf. use of ECT in Psychiatry).
24Parkinsons disease
- Common neurodegenerative disorder usual age of
onset over 50. - Principal symptoms
- Bradykinesia - slowness and poverty of movement
- Muscular rigidity
- Resting tremor (not during movement)
- Abnormalities in posture and gait
- Progresses to complete akinesia, and often a
degree of cognitive rigidity, depression and
dementia.
25Causes of Parkinsons disease
- Idiopathic
- Viral (post encephalitic)
- Toxin induced (Manganese,
- MPTP - heroin impurity, ? others)
- neuroleptic drug induced
26Brain changes in Parkinsons
- Loss of pigmentation in substantia nigra (SN)
- This reflects degeneration of the dopaminergic
(DA) system projecting from SN to the striatum
(caudate-putamen) and, to a lesser extent, of
projections to the rest of the basal ganglia,
including the putamen, and the n. accumbens - Of secondary importance, is damage to
noradrenergic and serotonergic systems and damage
to cholinergic projections to the cortex.
27Models of Parkinsons, and drugs
- 6-hydroxydopamine lesions of nigrostriatal DA
projections (bilateral vs unilateral) - MPTP lesions in primates, or mice, but not rats
- Drugs used to treat Parkinsons (I)
- Anticholinergics not a primary ACh disorder,
but these restore balance, and hence function,
between (depleted) DA, and ACh, in striatum - - effective against tremor and rigidity
28Drugs used to treat Parkinsons (II)
- L-DOPA - precursor of dopamine which can cross
the blood brain barrier - - effective especially against akinesia
- Concurrent use of a dopa-decarboxylase inhibitor
(carbidopa, benserazide), not penetrating to the
brain, - reduces dose of DOPA required, and
peripheral side effects - Direct DA agonists apomorphine, bromocriptine,
pergolide, lisuride - DA releasing agent - Amantadine
- Blocker of DA metabolism (MAO-B inhibitor)
- Selegiline (deprenyl)
29Treatment of Parkinsons (cont)
- Limitations on treatment
- Progresssive degeneration
- On-off phenomena (receptor changes ?)
- Other approaches
- Pallidotomy circumscribed lesions in globus
pallidus interna. Also stimulation. - Results encouraging
- Transplantation of new cells (Adrenal cells vs
Foetal cells vs immortalised stem cells, which
will become DA specific). Results equivocal. - Ethical and anatomical problems
30Huntingtons disease (chorea)
- Rare inherited neurodegenerative disorder - usual
onset over 50. - Â Principal symptoms
- Involuntary and irregular limb movements
(chorea dance in Greek). - These progress, and are accompanied by
cognitive disorder and dementia - Massive neuronal loss of GABA output cells from
the corpus striatum (can progress to 90 loss)
(contrast Parkinsons - loss of DA input).
31Genetic basis for Huntingtons
- Inherited as autosomal dominant the child of an
affected parent has a 50 chance of inheriting
it. - Gene has now been identified on Chromosome 4, and
the defect identified as multiple repetitions of
the base triad that codes for the amino acid
glutamine. - Hence the protein product, known as huntingtin,
has an extra stretch of glutamines. The longer
this is, the younger the age of onset, suggesting
a causal role.
32Genetic basis for Huntingtons II
- Also targeted mutations for this gene are fatal
in utero in the mouse. - However the role of the protein, and how it
damages the striatum selectively, is not known. - Suggestions focus on interference with glucose
metabolism.
33Models of Huntingtons
- Since the mechanism is not yet understood, models
focus on the consequences at cellular level,
rather than the cellular cause. - Coyle and Schwarcz (1976) pointed out that
excitotoxic lesions of striatum (initially using
kainate) could mimic the neurochemical and
histopathological features of the disorder. - Some investigators have suggested that quinolinic
acid, an excitatory amino acid analogue formed
endogenously from tryptophan, produces an even
better model, and have suggested that it might
contribute as an endogenous neurotoxin (this
pathway is known to be active in brain).
34Models of Huntingtons (cont.)
- Striatum is vulnerable because it has massive
glutamatergic input from cortex, and hence many
glutamate receptor sites, both NMDA and non-NMDA.
- They are principally on Gaba medium spiny output
cells projecting to the pallidum, substantia
nigra (pars reticulata), thalamus and
sub-thalamic n. - Relevant neurochemical observations Glucose
metabolic rate in striatum is reduced
(2-deoxy-glucose technique - Kuhl et al, 1985).
Could enable possible early detection. Also CSF
GABA concn. is reduced (Manyam et al, 1980)
35Brain mechanisms in Parkinsons and Huntingtons
- Diagram of the striatum.
- Essentially there are cortico-striatal-pallidal-t
halamo-cortical loops. - There is a direct pathway, and an indirect
pathway. - In addition, the DA input from the substantia
nigra (SN) is excitatory in association with the
direct pathway, and inhibitory in association
with the indirect pathway.
36Brain mechanisms in (II) Parkinsons and
Huntingtons
- In PD, loss of the DA input to the striatum
results in increased activity of the indirect
output (via globus pallidus external (GPe) and
subthalamic nucleus (STN), and reduced activity
of the direct output, to the globus pallidus
internal (GPi). Both of these effects increase
inhibition of the thalamus and reduce motor
output from the cortex. - In HD, loss of the inhibitory output from the
striatum to the GPe (indirect pathway) results in
excessive inhibition of the STN, and thus the
GPi. This results in reduced inhibition of the
thalamus by the GPi, and hence increased
excitation of the motor cortex, and motor output
(opposite effect to PD)