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Dive into the research topics where Irina Popova is active.

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Featured researches published by Irina Popova.


Experimental Neurology | 2013

Disturbances of septohippocampal theta oscillations in the epileptic brain: Reasons and consequences

Valentina F. Kitchigina; Irina Popova; Victoria Sinelnikova; Anton Malkov; Elena Astasheva; Liubov Shubina; Rubin Aliev

Temporal lobe epilepsy (TLE) is one of the most common forms of epilepsy, characterized by hippocampal sclerosis and memory deficits. It is well-documented that intrinsic neuronal oscillations and provided by them communications between brain structures are of importance for cognition. Epilepsy disturbs these brain rhythms and presumably therefore affects memory. Here we review studies on cellular and systemic levels devoted to the TLE-induced disturbance of theta oscillations in the septohippocampal system. Special attention is paid to the role of damage of septal and hippocampal GABAergic cells in theta activity abnormalities. We also compare differences between native (in vivo) theta oscillations with those obtained in in vitro preparations of hippocampus and medial septum and find that in vitro they resemble epileptiform activity in some respects.


Journal of Neuroscience Research | 2017

Chronic inhibition of brain glycolysis initiates epileptogenesis.

Evgeniya Samokhina; Irina Popova; Anton Malkov; Anton Ivanov; Daniela Papadia; Alexander Osypov; Maxim Molchanov; Svetlana I. Paskevich; André Fisahn; Misha Zilberter; Yuri Zilberter

Metabolic abnormalities found in epileptogenic tissue provide considerable evidence of brain hypometabolism, while major risk factors for acquired epilepsy all share brain hypometabolism as one common outcome, suggesting that a breakdown of brain energy homeostasis may actually precede epileptogenesis. However, a causal link between deficient brain energy metabolism and epilepsy initiation has not been yet established. To address this issue we developed an in vivo model of chronic energy hypometabolism by daily intracerebroventricular (i.c.v.) injection of the nonmetabolizable glucose analog 2‐deoxy‐D‐glucose (2‐DG) and also investigated acute effects of 2‐DG on the cellular level. In hippocampal slices, acute glycolysis inhibition by 2‐DG (by about 35%) led to contrasting effects on the network: a downregulation of excitatory synaptic transmission together with a depolarization of neuronal resting potential and a decreased drive of inhibitory transmission. Therefore, the potential acute effect of 2‐DG on network excitability depends on the balance between these opposing pre‐ and postsynaptic changes. In vivo, we found that chronic 2‐DG i.c.v. application (estimated transient inhibition of brain glycolysis under 14%) for a period of 4 weeks induced epileptiform activity in initially healthy male rats. Our results suggest that chronic inhibition of brain energy metabolism, characteristics of the well‐established risk factors of acquired epilepsy, and specifically a reduction in glucose utilization (typically observed in epileptic patients) can initiate epileptogenesis.


Journal of Cerebral Blood Flow and Metabolism | 2014

Reactive oxygen species initiate a metabolic collapse in hippocampal slices: potential trigger of cortical spreading depression.

Anton Malkov; Anton Ivanov; Irina Popova; Marat Mukhtarov; Olena Gubkina; Tatsiana Waseem; Piotr Bregestovski; Yuri Zilberter

Excessive accumulation of reactive oxygen species (ROS) underlies oxidative damage. We find that in hippocampal slices, decreased activity of glucose-based antioxidant system induces a massive, abrupt, and detrimental change in cellular functions. We call this phenomenon metabolic collapse (MC). This collapse manifested in long-lasting silencing of synaptic transmission, abnormal oxidation of NAD(P)H and FADH2 associated with immense oxygen consumption, and massive neuronal depolarization. MC occurred without any preceding deficiency in neuronal energy supply or disturbances of ionic homeostasis and spread throughout the hippocampus. It was associated with a preceding accumulation of ROS and was largely prevented by application of an efficient antioxidant Tempol (4-hydroxy-2,2,6,6-tetramethylpiperidine-1-oxyl). The consequences of MC resemble cortical spreading depression (CSD), a wave of neuronal depolarization that occurs in migraine, brain trauma, and stroke, the cellular initiation mechanisms of which are poorly understood. We suggest that ROS accumulation might also be the primary trigger of CSD. Indeed, we found that Tempol strongly reduced occurrence of CSD in vivo, suggesting that ROS accumulation may be a key mechanism of CSD initiation.


Neurobiology of Disease | 2017

Metabolic correction by pyruvate halts acquired epilepsy in multiple rodent models

Irina Popova; Anton Malkov; Anton Ivanov; E. Samokhina; Svetlana Buldakova; Olena Gubkina; Alexander Osypov; R.S. Muhammadiev; T. Zilberter; Maxim Molchanov; Svetlana I. Paskevich; Misha Zilberter; Yuri Zilberter

Metabolic intervention strategy of epilepsy treatment has been gaining broader attention due to accumulated evidence that hypometabolism, manifested in humans as reduced brain glucose consumption, is a principal factor in acquired epilepsy. Therefore, targeting deficient energy metabolism may be an effective approach for treating epilepsy. To confront this pathology we utilized pyruvate, which besides being an anaplerotic mitochondrial fuel possesses a unique set of neuroprotective properties as it: (i) is a potent reactive oxygen species scavenger; (ii) abates overactivation of Poly [ADP-ribose] polymerase 1 (PARP-1); (iii) facilitates glutamate efflux from the brain; (iv) augments brain glycogen stores; (v) is anti-inflammatory; (vi) prevents neuronal hyperexcitability; and (vii) normalizes the cytosolic redox state. In vivo, chronic oral pyruvate administration completely abolished established epileptic phenotypes in three accepted and fundamentally different rodent acquired epilepsy models. Our study reports metabolic correction by pyruvate as a potentially highly effective treatment of acquired epilepsies.


Neurobiology of Disease | 2018

Seizure-induced reduction in glucose utilization promotes brain hypometabolism during epileptogenesis

Anton Malkov; Anton Ivanov; Svetlana Buldakova; Tatsiana Waseem; Irina Popova; Misha Zilberter; Yuri Zilberter

Brain glucose hypometabolism is an early symptom of acquired epilepsy, its causative mechanism yet unclear. We suggest that a bidirectional positive feedback linking seizures and hypometabolism (hypometabolism induces seizures while seizures disrupt glucose metabolism) may be a primary cause for acquired epileptogenesis. We reported recently that chronic partial inhibition of brain glycolysis triggers epileptogenesis in healthy rats. Here, by monitoring dynamic electrical and multiple metabolic parameters before and following seizure generation in mouse hippocampal slices using the 4-aminopyridine model of epileptiform activity, we show that in turn seizures are followed by a long-lasting glucose hypometabolism, indicating possible existence of a positive feedback in the mechanism of epileptogenesis. Seizures were associated with acute oxidative stress that may contribute to the subsequent glucose metabolism impairment, since exogenous application of H2O2 replicated the post-seizure metabolic effects. Exogenous pyruvate, the principal mitochondrial energy substrate with a broad spectrum of neuroprotective properties, effectively normalized the post-seizure glucose consumption. We have shown recently that pyruvate exhibited a strong antiepileptic action in three rodent chronic epilepsy models, while in the present study we find that pyruvate effectively normalizes impaired glucose metabolism following seizures. Together, our results provide the mechanistic basis for the metabolic concept of acquired epileptogenesis and an efficient treatment strategy.


T'ang Studies | 2000

T'ang Studies in Russia during the Past Fifteen Years

Irina Popova

Russian Sinology has a long history, about three hundred years, and it is one of the most.productive realms of Asian Studies. The last nearly fifteen years have been characterized by an increase in activities regarding East Asian and Chinese studies in Russia. This owes much to 1) the extension of international connections and exchange, and 2) the appearance of a number of independent publishing houses. During the past decade and a half, large numbers of research monographs, archive materials, translations of classical texts and belles-lettres, readers selections and manuals have been published and republished. Works on Sinology have been surprisingly popular, and books on Chinese studies are being bought by people who have absolutely no professional relation to the research itself. The great interest in Eastern civilization, always a feature of Russian culture, has in the last years become enormous. Perhaps one may explain it by the intention to avoid an ideological vacuum at the current stage of development of Russian society, when people seek an appealing view of life in Eastern philosophies, and also owing to an increase in the number of Chinese emigrants, which has had a significant impact on practical sinology in Russia. The majority of Russian specialists in Chinese studies have positions at the institutes of the Russian Academy of Sciences (the biggest of these are the Institute of Oriental Studies and the Institute of the Far East). Others work at universities under the Ministry of Education or in museums, publishing houses, libraries, or other institutions. The total number of Russian research specialists on China (those who have published works) may approach one


Quality & Quantity | 2014

On the choice of measures of reliability and validity in the content-analysis of texts

Anton Oleinik; Irina Popova; Svetlana Kirdina; Tatyana Shatalova


Archive | 2007

Central Asian Law: An Historical Overview

Wallace Johnson; Irina Popova


Scientometrics | 2017

On academic reading: citation patterns and beyond

Anton Oleinik; Svetlana Kirdina-Chandler; Irina Popova; Tatyana Shatalova


Archive | 2015

WRITTEN MONUMENTS OF THE ORIENT

Irina Popova; Tatiana Pang; Elena Tanonova; Desmond Durkin-Meisterernst; Michael Friedrich; Yuly Ioannesyan; Karashima Seishi; Aliy Kolesnikov; Alexander Kudelin; Karine Marandzhyan; Georges-Jean Pinault; Stanislav Prozorov; Rong Xinjiang; Nicholas Sims-Williams; Stephen F. Teiser; Hartmut Walravens; Nataliya Yakhontova

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Anton Malkov

Russian Academy of Sciences

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Anton Ivanov

Aix-Marseille University

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Yuri Zilberter

Aix-Marseille University

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Alexander Osypov

Russian Academy of Sciences

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Maxim Molchanov

Russian Academy of Sciences

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Anton Oleinik

Memorial University of Newfoundland

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E. Samokhina

Russian Academy of Sciences

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