mTOR and neuroinflammation in epilepsy: implications for disease progression and treatment

IF 28.7 1区 医学 Q1 NEUROSCIENCES Nature Reviews Neuroscience Pub Date : 2024-03-26 DOI:10.1038/s41583-024-00805-1
Teresa Ravizza, Mirte Scheper, Rossella Di Sapia, Jan Gorter, Eleonora Aronica, Annamaria Vezzani
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Abstract

Epilepsy remains a major health concern as anti-seizure medications frequently fail, and there is currently no treatment to stop or prevent epileptogenesis, the process underlying the onset and progression of epilepsy. The identification of the pathological processes underlying epileptogenesis is instrumental to the development of drugs that may prevent the generation of seizures or control pharmaco-resistant seizures, which affect about 30% of patients. mTOR signalling and neuroinflammation have been recognized as critical pathways that are activated in brain cells in epilepsy. They represent a potential node of biological convergence in structural epilepsies with either a genetic or an acquired aetiology. Interventional studies in animal models and clinical studies give strong support to the involvement of each pathway in epilepsy. In this Review, we focus on available knowledge about the pathophysiological features of mTOR signalling and the neuroinflammatory brain response, and their interactions, in epilepsy. We discuss mitigation strategies for each pathway that display therapeutic effects in experimental and clinical epilepsy. A deeper understanding of these interconnected molecular cascades could enhance our strategies for managing epilepsy. This could pave the way for new treatments to fill the gaps in the development of preventative or disease-modifying drugs, thus overcoming the limitations of current symptomatic medications. There is a pressing need for drugs that effectively control pharmaco-resistant seizures and prevent their generation. In this Review, Vezzani and co-workers discuss the interconnected roles of mTOR signalling and neuroinflammatory processes in epileptogenesis, and how targeting these pathways might prove useful therapeutically.

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癫痫中的 mTOR 和神经炎症:对疾病进展和治疗的影响。
由于抗癫痫药物经常失效,而且目前还没有任何治疗方法可以阻止或预防癫痫的发生,而癫痫的发生和发展过程就是癫痫的病理过程。mTOR信号传导和神经炎症已被认为是癫痫患者脑细胞中被激活的关键通路。它们是遗传性或获得性结构性癫痫的潜在生物汇合点。动物模型和临床研究中的干预性研究有力地证明了每种通路在癫痫中的参与性。在本综述中,我们将重点介绍有关癫痫中 mTOR 信号传导和大脑神经炎症反应及其相互作用的病理生理学特征的现有知识。我们讨论了在实验和临床癫痫中显示出治疗效果的每种通路的缓解策略。加深对这些相互关联的分子级联的理解,可以增强我们的癫痫治疗策略。这可以为新的治疗方法铺平道路,填补预防或疾病改变药物开发的空白,从而克服目前对症药物的局限性。
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期刊介绍: Nature Reviews Neuroscience is a multidisciplinary journal that covers various fields within neuroscience, aiming to offer a comprehensive understanding of the structure and function of the central nervous system. Advances in molecular, developmental, and cognitive neuroscience, facilitated by powerful experimental techniques and theoretical approaches, have made enduring neurobiological questions more accessible. Nature Reviews Neuroscience serves as a reliable and accessible resource, addressing the breadth and depth of modern neuroscience. It acts as an authoritative and engaging reference for scientists interested in all aspects of neuroscience.
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