23 research outputs found

    Cognitive dysfunction in cancer: Neuroimaging and genetic approaches to identify biological mechanisms

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    Indiana University-Purdue University Indianapolis (IUPUI)Although cancer and treatment-associated cognitive dysfunction has been well-documented in the literature, much work remains to elucidate the biological mechanisms driving this effect, hampering current therapeutic efforts. To address this gap, we first reviewed studies utilizing neuroimaging to characterize cognitive dysfunction in cancer, as studies of neurodegenerative diseases point to neuroimaging as a sensitive measure of cognitive dysfunction. This review highlighted the need for longitudinal imaging studies of cancer and treatment-related changes in cerebral structure and function. Subsequently, we utilized multimodal neuroimaging techniques in a female breast cancer cohort to investigate the longitudinal impact of cancer and chemotherapy treatment on cerebral perfusion and gray matter. Our findings indicate that chemotherapy is associated with elevated perfusion, primarily in posterior brain regions, as well as depressed frontal perfusion associated with decreased frontal gray matter density. This pattern of results suggests the involvement of multiple mechanisms of chemotherapy-induced cognitive dysfunction. We also investigated the relationship of cognitive dysfunction and chemotherapy-induced peripheral neuropathy (CIPN), another type of chemotherapy-related nervous system sequelae, again utilizing multimodal, longitudinal neuroimaging, and found that peripheral neuropathy symptoms following chemotherapy were associated with changes in cerebral perfusion and gray matter density. Together, these findings support the hypothesis that multiple biological mechanisms drive cancer and treatment-related cognitive dysfunction. Interestingly, although cancer is associated with cognitive dysfunction, epidemiological studies have shown that cancer and Alzheimer's disease (AD) are inversely correlated. To extend our imaging analysis beyond breast cancer, we leveraged the Alzheimer's Disease Neuroimaging Initiative (ADNI) cohort to investigate the inverse relationship of cancer and AD and investigate the impact of both of these diseases on gray matter density. We found that though the inverse relationship of these diseases was replicated in the ADNI cohort, cancer history was associated with lower gray matter density, similar to findings from breast cancer studies, independent of AD diagnostic group. Finally, we reviewed microRNA studies, as microRNAs are important regulators of many cell signaling pathways and have been actively investigated in relation to both diseases. This review suggests several pathways that may be driving the inverse association and may contribute to cognitive dysfunction

    Analysis of the Inverse Association between Cancer and Alzheimer’s Disease: Results from the Alzheimer’s Disease Neuroimaging Initiative Cohort

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    poster abstractAlthough a number of studies support a reciprocal inverse association between diagnoses of cancer and Alzheimer’s disease (AD), to date there has not been any systemic investigation of the neurobiological impact of or genetic risk factors underlying this effect. To facilitate this goal, this study aimed to replicate the inverse association of cancer and AD using data from the NIA Alzheimer’s Disease Neuroimaging Initiative, which includes age-matched cases and controls with information on cancer history, AD progression, neuroimaging, and genomic data. Subjects included individuals with AD (n=234), mild cognitive impairment (MCI, n=542), and healthy controls (HC, n=293). After controlling for sex, education, race/ethnicity, smoking, and apolipoprotein E (APOE) e2/3/4 allele groups, cancer history was protective against baseline AD diagnosis (p=0.042), and was associated with later age of AD onset (p=0.001). Cancer history appears to result in a cumulative protective effect; individuals with more than one cancer had a later age of AD onset compared to those with only one cancer (p=0.001). Finally, a protective effect of AD was also observed in individuals who developed incident cancer after enrolling (post-baseline visit); 20 individuals with MCI and 9 HC developed cancer, while no AD patients had subsequent cancer diagnoses (p=0.013). This supports previous research on the inverse association of cancer and AD, and importantly provides novel evidence that this effect appears to be independent of APOE, the major known genetic risk factor for AD. Future analyses will investigate the neurobiological and genetic basis of this effect

    The associations between Parkinson’s disease and cancer: the plot thickens

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    Evaluating the impact of chemotherapy-induced peripheral neuropathy symptoms (CIPN-sx) on perceived ability to work in breast cancer survivors during the first year post-treatment

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    Purpose: To describe the impact of chemotherapy-induced peripheral neuropathy symptoms (CIPN-sx) on breast cancer survivors’ (BCS) perceived ability to work post-treatment. Methods: The sample included 22 chemotherapy-treated (Ctx+) and 22 chemotherapy-naïve (Ctx−) female BCS. Data was collected at the following three time points: baseline (post-surgery, pre-chemotherapy), 1 month (1 M) post-chemotherapy, and approximately 1 year (1 Y) later. The presence, frequency, number, and severity of CIPN-sx were self-reported using the Functional Assessment of Cancer Therapy/Gynecologic Oncology Group–Neurotoxicity questionnaire (FACT/GOG-Ntx) version 4, a validated 11-item CIPN measure. Perceived ability to work was measured using an item from the Functional Well-Being subscale of the FACT/GOG-Ntx. Results: At 1 Y, more than 50 % of Ctx+ reported discomfort, numbness, or tingling in their hands or feet; weakness; or difficulty feeling small objects. The presence, number, and severity of these symptoms were correlated with being less able to work for Ctx+ at 1 M but not 1 Y. Results of a regression analysis using CIPN-sx to predict work ability found that models combining (1) hand numbness and trouble feeling small objects, (2) trouble buttoning buttons and trouble feeling small objects, (3) foot numbness and foot pain, (4) foot numbness and trouble walking, and (5) trouble hearing and hand pain each predicted survivors who were “not at all” able to work at 1 M. Conclusions: Unresolved CIPN-sx may play a role in challenges working for BCS post-treatment. These findings highlight the need for research to explore the impact that CIPN-sx have on BCS’ ability to work, as well as the development of interventions to improve work function in BCS with CIPN-sx

    Specialized Yeast Ribosomes: A Customized Tool for Selective mRNA Translation

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    Evidence is now accumulating that sub-populations of ribosomes - so-called specialized ribosomes - can favour the translation of subsets of mRNAs. Here we use a large collection of diploid yeast strains, each deficient in one or other copy of the set of ribosomal protein (RP) genes, to generate eukaryotic cells carrying distinct populations of altered ‘specialized’ ribosomes. We show by comparative protein synthesis assays that different heterologous mRNA reporters based on luciferase are preferentially translated by distinct populations of specialized ribosomes. These mRNAs include reporters carrying premature termination codons (PTC) thus allowing us to identify specialized ribosomes that alter the efficiency of translation termination leading to enhanced synthesis of the wild-type protein. This finding suggests that these strains can be used to identify novel therapeutic targets in the ribosome. To explore this further we examined the translation of the mRNA encoding the extracellular matrix protein laminin ?3 (LAMB3) since a LAMB3-PTC mutant is implicated in the blistering skin disease Epidermolysis bullosa (EB). This screen identified specialized ribosomes with reduced levels of RP L35B as showing enhanced synthesis of full-length LAMB3 in cells expressing the LAMB3-PTC mutant. Importantly, the RP L35B sub-population of specialized ribosomes leave both translation of a reporter luciferase carrying a different PTC and bulk mRNA translation largely unaltered
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