4.4 Article

Cerebromicrovascular dysfunction predicts cognitive decline and gait abnormalities in a mouse model of whole brain irradiation-induced accelerated brain senescence

Journal

GEROSCIENCE
Volume 39, Issue 1, Pages 33-42

Publisher

SPRINGER
DOI: 10.1007/s11357-017-9964-z

Keywords

Whole brain irradiation; Neurovascular coupling; Functional hyperemia; Dementia; Gait dysfunction; Neurovascular unit; Cellular senescence; DNA damage

Funding

  1. Reynolds Foundation
  2. American Heart Association
  3. National Center for Complementary and Alternative Medicine [R01-AT006526]
  4. National Institute on Aging [R01-AG047879, R01-AG038747, 3P30AG050911-02S1]
  5. National Institute of Neurological Disorders and Stroke (NINDS) [R01-NS056218]
  6. Oklahoma Center for the Advancement of Science and Technology
  7. IBEST-OUHSC

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Whole brain irradiation (WBI) is a mainstream therapy for patients with both identifiable brain metastases and prophylaxis for microscopic malignancies. However, it also promotes accelerated senescence in healthy tissues and leads to progressive cognitive dysfunction in up to 50% of tumor patients surviving long term after treatment, due gamma- irradiation-induced cerebromicrovascular injury. Moment-to-moment adjustment of cerebral blood flow (CBF) vi a neuronal activity-dependent cerebromicrovascular dilation (functional hyperemia) has a critical role inmaintenance of healthy cognitive function. To determine whether cognitive decline induced by WBI associates with impaired cerebromicrovascular function, C56BL.6mice (3months) subjected to a clinically relevant protocol of fractionated WBI (5 Gy twice weekly for 4 weeks) and control mice were compared. Mice were tested for spatial memory performance (radial arm water maze), sensorimotor coordination (computerized gait analysis, CatWalk), and cerebromicrovascular function (whisker- stimulation-induced increases in CBF, measured by laser Doppler flowmetry) at 3 to 6 months post-irradiation. We found that mice with WBI exhibited impaired cerebromicrovascular function at 3 months post-irradiation, which was associated with impaired performance in the radial arm water maze. At 6 months, post-irradiation progressive impairment in gait coordination (including changes in the regularity index and phase dispersion) was also evident. Collectively, our findings provide evidence for early and persisting neurovascular impairment after a clinically relevant protocol of fractionated WBI, which predict early manifestations of cognitive impairment.

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