Pharmacological rescue of cognitive function in a mouse model of chemobrain

Abstract Background After chemotherapy, many cancer survivors suffer from long-lasting cognitive impairment, colloquially known as “chemobrain.” However, the trajectories of cognitive changes and the underlying mechanisms remain unclear. We previously established paclitaxel-induced inositol trisphos...

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Main Authors: Lien D. Nguyen, Tom T. Fischer, Barbara E. Ehrlich
Format: Article
Language:English
Published: BMC 2021-06-01
Series:Molecular Neurodegeneration
Subjects:
Online Access:https://doi.org/10.1186/s13024-021-00463-2
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spelling doaj-5625476c5c6e44dfbbb57f40d1aed73e2021-06-27T11:25:37ZengBMCMolecular Neurodegeneration1750-13262021-06-0116111610.1186/s13024-021-00463-2Pharmacological rescue of cognitive function in a mouse model of chemobrainLien D. Nguyen0Tom T. Fischer1Barbara E. Ehrlich2Department of Pharmacology, Yale UniversityDepartment of Pharmacology, Yale UniversityDepartment of Pharmacology, Yale UniversityAbstract Background After chemotherapy, many cancer survivors suffer from long-lasting cognitive impairment, colloquially known as “chemobrain.” However, the trajectories of cognitive changes and the underlying mechanisms remain unclear. We previously established paclitaxel-induced inositol trisphosphate receptor (InsP3R)-dependent calcium oscillations as a mechanism for peripheral neuropathy, which was prevented by lithium pretreatment. Here, we investigated if a similar mechanism also underlay paclitaxel-induced chemobrain. Method Mice were injected with 4 doses of 20 mg/kg paclitaxel every other day to induced cognitive impairment. Memory acquisition was assessed with the displaced object recognition test. The morphology of neurons in the prefrontal cortex and the hippocampus was analyzed using Golgi-Cox staining, followed by Sholl analyses. Changes in protein expression were measured by Western blot. Results Mice receiving paclitaxel showed impaired short-term spatial memory acquisition both acutely 5 days post injection and chronically 23 days post injection. Dendritic length and complexity were reduced in the hippocampus and the prefrontal cortex after paclitaxel injection. Concurrently, the expression of protein kinase C α (PKCα), an effector in the InsP3R pathway, was increased. Treatment with lithium before or shortly after paclitaxel injection rescued the behavioral, cellular, and molecular deficits observed. Similarly, memory and morphological deficits could be rescued by pretreatment with chelerythrine, a PKC inhibitor. Conclusion We establish the InsP3R calcium pathway and impaired neuronal morphology as mechanisms for paclitaxel-induced cognitive impairment. Our findings suggest lithium and PKC inhibitors as candidate agents for preventing chemotherapy-induced cognitive impairment.https://doi.org/10.1186/s13024-021-00463-2CalciumPaclitaxelProtein kinase CDendritesSpines
collection DOAJ
language English
format Article
sources DOAJ
author Lien D. Nguyen
Tom T. Fischer
Barbara E. Ehrlich
spellingShingle Lien D. Nguyen
Tom T. Fischer
Barbara E. Ehrlich
Pharmacological rescue of cognitive function in a mouse model of chemobrain
Molecular Neurodegeneration
Calcium
Paclitaxel
Protein kinase C
Dendrites
Spines
author_facet Lien D. Nguyen
Tom T. Fischer
Barbara E. Ehrlich
author_sort Lien D. Nguyen
title Pharmacological rescue of cognitive function in a mouse model of chemobrain
title_short Pharmacological rescue of cognitive function in a mouse model of chemobrain
title_full Pharmacological rescue of cognitive function in a mouse model of chemobrain
title_fullStr Pharmacological rescue of cognitive function in a mouse model of chemobrain
title_full_unstemmed Pharmacological rescue of cognitive function in a mouse model of chemobrain
title_sort pharmacological rescue of cognitive function in a mouse model of chemobrain
publisher BMC
series Molecular Neurodegeneration
issn 1750-1326
publishDate 2021-06-01
description Abstract Background After chemotherapy, many cancer survivors suffer from long-lasting cognitive impairment, colloquially known as “chemobrain.” However, the trajectories of cognitive changes and the underlying mechanisms remain unclear. We previously established paclitaxel-induced inositol trisphosphate receptor (InsP3R)-dependent calcium oscillations as a mechanism for peripheral neuropathy, which was prevented by lithium pretreatment. Here, we investigated if a similar mechanism also underlay paclitaxel-induced chemobrain. Method Mice were injected with 4 doses of 20 mg/kg paclitaxel every other day to induced cognitive impairment. Memory acquisition was assessed with the displaced object recognition test. The morphology of neurons in the prefrontal cortex and the hippocampus was analyzed using Golgi-Cox staining, followed by Sholl analyses. Changes in protein expression were measured by Western blot. Results Mice receiving paclitaxel showed impaired short-term spatial memory acquisition both acutely 5 days post injection and chronically 23 days post injection. Dendritic length and complexity were reduced in the hippocampus and the prefrontal cortex after paclitaxel injection. Concurrently, the expression of protein kinase C α (PKCα), an effector in the InsP3R pathway, was increased. Treatment with lithium before or shortly after paclitaxel injection rescued the behavioral, cellular, and molecular deficits observed. Similarly, memory and morphological deficits could be rescued by pretreatment with chelerythrine, a PKC inhibitor. Conclusion We establish the InsP3R calcium pathway and impaired neuronal morphology as mechanisms for paclitaxel-induced cognitive impairment. Our findings suggest lithium and PKC inhibitors as candidate agents for preventing chemotherapy-induced cognitive impairment.
topic Calcium
Paclitaxel
Protein kinase C
Dendrites
Spines
url https://doi.org/10.1186/s13024-021-00463-2
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AT barbaraeehrlich pharmacologicalrescueofcognitivefunctioninamousemodelofchemobrain
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