Metabolomics

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Lipid-accumulated reactive astrocytes promote disease progression in epilepsy (Human lipidomics)


ABSTRACT:

Reactive astrocytes play an important role in neurological diseases, but their molecular and functional phenotypes in epilepsy are unclear. Here, we show that in patients with temporal lobe epilepsy (TLE) and mouse models of epilepsy, excessive lipid accumulation in astrocytes leads to the formation of lipid-accumulated reactive astrocytes (LARAs), a new reactive astrocyte subtype characterized by elevated APOE expression. Genetic knockout of APOE inhibited LARA formation and seizure activities in epileptic mice. Single-nucleus RNA sequencing in TLE patients confirmed the existence of a LARA subpopulation with a distinct molecular signature. Functional studies in epilepsy mouse models and human brain slices showed that LARAs promote neuronal hyperactivity and disease progression. Targeting LARAs by intervention with lipid transport and metabolism could thus provide new therapeutic options for drug-resistant TLE.


Human lipidomics is reported in the current study MTBLS8856.

Mice lipidomics reported in MTBLS8865.

INSTRUMENT(S): Liquid Chromatography MS - negative - reverse phase, Liquid Chromatography MS - positive - reverse phase

PROVIDER: MTBLS8856 | MetaboLights | 2025-07-03

REPOSITORIES: MetaboLights

Dataset's files

Source:
Action DRS
NEG_Eb02CZP_CTL_1.raw Raw
NEG_Eb02CZP_CTL_2.raw Raw
NEG_Eb02CZP_CTL_3.raw Raw
NEG_Eb02CZP_CTL_4.raw Raw
NEG_Eb02CZP_CTL_5.raw Raw
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Publications


Reactive astrocytes play an important role in neurological diseases, but their molecular and functional phenotypes in epilepsy are unclear. Here, we show that in patients with temporal lobe epilepsy (TLE) and mouse models of epilepsy, excessive lipid accumulation in astrocytes leads to the formation of lipid-accumulated reactive astrocytes (LARAs), a new reactive astrocyte subtype characterized by elevated APOE expression. Genetic knockout of APOE inhibited LARA formation and seizure activities  ...[more]

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