The heat shock protein 70 (Hsp70) is upregulated in response to stress and has been implicated as a stress marker in temporal lobe epilepsy (TLE). However, whether Hsp70 plays a pathologic or protective role in TLE remains unclear. Here we report a deleterious role of Hsp70 in kainic acid (KA)-induced seizures. Hsp70 expression is upregulated in a KA model of TLE, and silencing or inhibition of Hsp70 suppresses neuronal hyperexcitability and attenuates acute or chronic epilepsy by enhancing A-type potassium current in hippocampal neurons. Hsp70 upregulation leads to proteosomal degradation of Kv4-KChIP4a channel complexes primarily encoding neuronal A-type current. Furthermore, Hsp70 directly binds to the N terminus of auxiliary KChIP4a and targets Kv4-KChIP4a complexes to proteasome. Taken together, our findings reveal a role of Hsp70 in the pathogenesis of epilepsy through degradation of Kv4-KChIP4a complexes, and pharmacological inhibition of Hsp70 may represent therapeutic potential for epilepsy or hyperexcitability-related neurological disorders.
Keywords: A-type current; Hsp70; KChIP4a; Kv4; epilepsy; hyperexcitability; kainic acid; seizures; spontaneous recurrent seizures; status epilepticus.
Copyright © 2018 The Author(s). Published by Elsevier Inc. All rights reserved.