WONOEP appraisal: The role of glial cells in focal malformations associated with early onset epilepsies

WONOEP appraisal: The role of glial cells in focal malformations associated with early onset epilepsies

The graphical abstract provides an overview of the article’s content. The left panel illustrates the condition where neurons and glial cells sustain normal neuronal activity during brain development. In contrast, the right panel depicts potential alterations in glial and dysmorphic neuronal cells, which, along with an immune response, may trigger neuronal hyperexcitability in the context of cortical malformations (MCDs) and glioneuronal tumors (GNTs).

Abstract

Epilepsy represents a common neurological disorder in patients with developmental brain lesions, particularly in association with malformations of cortical development and low-grade glioneuronal tumors. In these diseases, genetic and molecular alterations in neurons are increasingly discovered that can trigger abnormalities in the neuronal network, leading to higher neuronal excitability levels. However, the mechanisms underlying epilepsy cannot rely solely on assessing the neuronal component. Growing evidence has revealed the high degree of complexity underlying epileptogenic processes, in which glial cells emerge as potential modulators of neuronal activity. Understanding the role of glial cells in developmental brain lesions such as malformations of cortical development and low-grade glioneuronal tumors is crucial due to the high degree of pharmacoresistance characteristic of these lesions. This has prompted research to investigate the role of glial and immune cells in epileptiform activity to find new therapeutic targets that could be used as combinatorial drug therapy. In a special session of the XVI Workshop of the Neurobiology of Epilepsy (WONOEP, Talloires, France, July 2022) organized by the Neurobiology Commission of the International League Against Epilepsy, we discussed the evidence exploring the genetic and molecular mechanisms of glial cells and immune response and their implications in the pathogenesis of neurodevelopmental pathologies associated with early life epilepsies.

0