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| Funder | NATIONAL CANCER INSTITUTE |
|---|---|
| Recipient Organization | University of Oklahoma Hlth Sciences Ctr |
| Country | United States |
| Start Date | Jan 01, 2021 |
| End Date | Dec 31, 2025 |
| Duration | 1,825 days |
| Number of Grantees | 1 |
| Roles | Principal Investigator |
| Data Source | NIH (US) |
| Grant ID | 10782975 |
Project Summary Many long-term survivors of cancer experience progressive chemotherapy-induced cognitive impairment (CICI, commonly referred to as "chemobrain"). Importantly, no strategies exist to prevent/reverse CICI. Chemotherapeutics do not cross the blood brain barrier and mature neurons are resistant to chemotherapeutic
agents. In contrast, endothelial cells are exposed to the highest concentrations of these drugs and are highly sensitive to their effects. We discovered that chemotherapeutic drugs, including paclitaxel (PTX) induce cerebromicrovascular endothelial cells to undergo cellular senescence, a common DNA damage response.
Endothelial cells play critical roles in regulation of basal CBF, moment-to-moment adjustment of CBF to neuronal activity via neurovascular coupling (NVC) and maintenance of the microcirculatory network. Each of these endothelial functions are critical for healthy brain function. The central hypothesis of this application is that
chemotherapeutic agents induce endothelial senescence, which impairs cerebral blood flow, promote microvascular rarefaction and compromise endothelium-dependent neurovascular coupling responses and barrier integrity contributing to CICI. This hypothesis will be tested using an innovative mouse model: cancer-
free senescence reporter mice treated with the chemotherapeutic drug paclitaxel (PTX), which allows the detection and selective elimination of senescent cells. Specific Aims: 1) Deter’mine how chemotherapy-induced endothelial sen’escence alters neurovascular coup’ling resp’onses and CBF. We postulate that chemotherapy
induces senescence in endothelial cells, which impairs endothelial vasodilator function, compromises endothelium-dependent NVC responses and decreases capillary density, dysregulating CBF. Our prediction,
based on this hypoth’esis, is that elimination of senesc’ent endothelial cells, through genetic manipulation or through
translatable senolytic therapies w’ill restore neurovascular fun’ction and improve CBF in mice treated with clinically relevant PTX protocol. 2) Deter’mine how chemotherapy-induced endothelial sen’escence impacts microvascular density. We postulate that chemotherapy -induced endothelial senescence compromises the maintenance of the
microcirculatory network and/or impairs endothelial barrier function and that elimination of senesc’ent cells w’ill increase cerebromicrovascular density and restore barrier function, attenuating neuroinflammation. 3) Deter’mine how chemotherapy-induced endothelial sen’escence impacts cognitive function. We postulate that PTX-induced
microvascular dysfunction contribute to the impairment of multiple domains of cognition and that elimination of senescent cells will prevent/delay the development of CICI. Our expected outcomes will generate an integrated understanding of the mechanisms that underlie microvascular dysfunction after chemotherapy and establish
endothelial senescence as a translationally relevant target for prevention of CICI.
University of Oklahoma Hlth Sciences Ctr
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