10 research outputs found

    Recent Advances on Immunosuppressive Drugs and Remyelination Enhancers for the Treatment of Multiple Sclerosis

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    Mammalian nervous systems depend crucially on myelin sheaths covering the axons. In the central nervous system, myelin sheaths consist of lipid structures that are generated from the membrane of oligodendro-cytes (OL). These sheaths allow fast nerve transmission, protect axons and provide them metabolic support. In response to specific traumas or pathologies, these lipid structures can be destabilized and generate demyelinat-ing lesions. Multiple sclerosis (MS) is an example of a demyelinating disease in which the myelin sheaths sur-rounding the nerve fibers of the brain and spinal cord are damaged. MS is the leading cause of neurological disability in young adults in many countries, and its incidence has been increasing in recent decades. Related to its etiology, it is known that MS is an autoimmune and inflammatory CNS disease. However, there are no effective treatments for this disease and the immunomodulatory therapies that currently exist have proven limited success since they only delay the progress of the disease. Nowadays, one of the main goals in MS research is to find treatments which allow the recovery of neurological disabilities due to demyelination. To this end, different approaches, such as modulating intracellular signaling or regulating the lipid metabolism of OLs, are being considered. Here, in addition to immunosuppressive or immunomodulatory drugs that reduce the immune response against myelin sheaths, we review a diverse group of drugs that promotes endogenous remyelination in MS patients and their use may be interesting as potential therapeutic agents in MS disease. To this end, we compile specific treatments against MS that are currently in the market with remyelination strategies that have entered into human clinical trials for future reparative MS therapies. The method used in this study is a systematic literature review on PubMed, Web of Science and Science Direct databases up to May 31, 2020. To narrow down the search results in databases, more specific keywords, such as “myelin sheath”, “remyelination”, “de-myelination”, “oligodendrocyte” and “lipid synthesis” were used to focus the search. We preferred papers pub-lished after January 2015, but did not exclude earlier seminal papers

    Fatty Acids and Antioxidants in Multiple Sclerosis: Therapeutic Role of GEMSP

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    [EN] Multiple sclerosis is a high-frequency neurological disorder in young adults. Although there are some genetic and environmental factors that have been related to the onset of the disease, these are still not completely understood and nowadays multiple sclerosis can neither be prevented, nor its symptom effectively treated due to disease heterogeneity. For this reason, the search of prognostic factors and new therapeutic compounds for MS has long aroused among clinicians and researchers. Among these therapeutic compounds, GEMSP, which consists of a mixture of functional constituents as fatty acids, antioxidants, free radical scavengers and amino acids linked individually to poly-L-Lysine (PL), is emerging as a promising drug for MS treatment. Pre-clinical studies using GEMSP have demonstrated that this drug strongly inhibits brain leukocyte infiltration and completely abolishes experimental autoimmune encephalomyelitis. In addition, in an open clinical trial in humans treated with GEMSP, in 72% of the cases, a positive evolution of the state of the MS patients treated with GMSP was observed. In this review a biochemical characterization of main constituents of GEMSP, which include fatty acids as oleic acid, linoleic acid or azelaic acid and the antioxidants alpha-tocopherol or ascorbic acid, will be provided in order to understand their proved therapeutic effects in MS

    Intermediate Molecular Phenotypes to Identify Genetic Markers of Anthracycline-Induced Cardiotoxicity Risk.

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    Cardiotoxicity due to anthracyclines (CDA) affects cancer patients, but we cannot predict who may suffer from this complication. CDA is a complex trait with a polygenic component that is mainly unidentified. We propose that levels of intermediate molecular phenotypes (IMPs) in the myocardium associated with histopathological damage could explain CDA susceptibility, so variants of genes encoding these IMPs could identify patients susceptible to this complication. Thus, a genetically heterogeneous cohort of mice (n = 165) generated by backcrossing were treated with doxorubicin and docetaxel. We quantified heart fibrosis using an Ariol slide scanner and intramyocardial levels of IMPs using multiplex bead arrays and QPCR. We identified quantitative trait loci linked to IMPs (ipQTLs) and cdaQTLs via linkage analysis. In three cancer patient cohorts, CDA was quantified using echocardiography or Cardiac Magnetic Resonance. CDA behaves as a complex trait in the mouse cohort. IMP levels in the myocardium were associated with CDA. ipQTLs integrated into genetic models with cdaQTLs account for more CDA phenotypic variation than that explained by cda-QTLs alone. Allelic forms of genes encoding IMPs associated with CDA in mice, including AKT1, MAPK14, MAPK8, STAT3, CAS3, and TP53, are genetic determinants of CDA in patients. Two genetic risk scores for pediatric patients (n = 71) and women with breast cancer (n = 420) were generated using machine-learning Least Absolute Shrinkage and Selection Operator (LASSO) regression. Thus, IMPs associated with heart damage identify genetic markers of CDA risk, thereby allowing more personalized patient management.J.P.L.’s lab is sponsored by Grant PID2020-118527RB-I00 funded by MCIN/AEI/10.13039/ 501100011039; Grant PDC2021-121735-I00 funded by MCIN/AEI/10.13039/501100011039 and by the “European Union Next Generation EU/PRTR”, the Regional Government of Castile and León (CSI144P20). J.P.L. and P.L.S. are supported by the Carlos III Health Institute (PIE14/00066). AGN laboratory and human patients’ studies are supported by an ISCIII project grant (PI18/01242). The Human Genotyping unit is a member of CeGen, PRB3, and is supported by grant PT17/0019 of the PE I + D + i 2013–2016, funded by ISCIII and ERDF. SCLl is supported by MINECO/FEDER research grants (RTI2018-094130-B-100). CH was supported by the Department of Defense (DoD) BCRP, No. BC190820; and the National Cancer Institute (NCI) at the National Institutes of Health (NIH), No. R01CA184476. Lawrence Berkeley National Laboratory (LBNL) is a multi-program national laboratory operated by the University of California for the DOE under contract DE AC02-05CH11231. The Proteomics Unit belongs to ProteoRed, PRB3-ISCIII, supported by grant PT17/0019/0023 of the PE I + D +i, 2017–2020, funded by ISCIII and FEDER. RCC is funded by fellowships from the Spanish Regional Government of Castile and León. NGS is a recipient of an FPU fellowship (MINECO/FEDER). hiPSC-CM studies were funded in part by the “la Caixa” Banking Foundation under the project code HR18-00304 and a Severo Ochoa CNIC Intramural Project (Exp. 12-2016 IGP) to J.J.S

    Oleic acid and cholinergic dysfunction in Down syndrome models of the central nervous system

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    [EN]Down syndrome (DS): or trisomy 21: is the most common autosomal aneuploidy and the leading genetic cause of intellectual disability. It is widely established that mental retardation is primarily a consequence of brain functioning and developmental abnormalities in neurogenesis. Some changes in the physical structure of the dendrites are a major cause of impaired synaptic plasticity of DS. The overexpression of the dual specificyty tyrsone phosphorylationregulated kinase 1A (DYRK1A): located on chromosome 21: is involved in cellular plasticity and responsible for central nervous system disturbance in DS. Oleic acid is a neurotrophic factor that promotes neuronal differentiation and increases the levels of choline acetyltransferase (ChAT). Furthermore: it has recently been shown that it induces migration and formation of new synapses in euploid cells. However: remarkably oleic acid fails to reproduce the same effects in trisomic cells. Here we review the hypothesis that oleic acid-dependent synaptic plasticity may be dependent on the lipid environment. Thus: differences in membrane composition may be essential to understand why oleic acid promotes higher cell plasticity in euploid than in trisomic cells

    Neuronal differentiation promoted by oleic acid is impaired in TgDyrk1A primary neuronal culture

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    [EN]Down syndrome (DS) is a genetic disease characterized by the presence of an extra copy of chromosome 21, resulting in a trisomy. The genetic origin was discovered in 1959 by Lejeune. Several defects in cortical lamination have been described during foetal development, that affect key brain regions involved in learning and memory processes

    Endocytosis and Transcytosis of Amyloid-β Peptides by Astrocytes: A Possible Mechanism for Amyloid-β Clearance in Alzheimer’s Disease

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    [EN]Amyloid-β (Aβ) peptides, Aβ40, Aβ42, and recently Aβ25 - 35, have been directly implicated in the pathogenesis of Alzheimer's disease (AD). We have previously shown that all three peptides decrease neuronal viability, but Aβ40 also promotes synaptic disassembling. In this work, we have studied the effects of these peptides on astrocytes in primary culture and found that the three Aβ peptides were internalized by astrocytes and significantly decreased astrocyte viability, while increasing ROS production. Aβ peptide internalization is temperature-dependent, a fact that supports the idea that Aβ peptides are actively endocytosed by astrocytes. However, inhibiting caveolae formation by methyl-beta-cyclodextrin or by silencing caveolin-1 with RNA interference did not prevent Aβ endocytosis, which suggests that Aβ peptides do not use caveolae to enter astrocytes. Conversely, inhibition of clathrin-coated vesicle formation by chlorpromazine or by silencing clathrin with RNA interference significantly decreased Aβ internalization and partially reverted the decrease of astrocyte viability caused by the presence of Aβ. These results suggest that Aβ is endocytosed by clathrin-coated vesicles in astrocytes. Aβ-loaded astrocytes, when co-incubated with non-treated astrocytes in separate wells but with the same incubation medium, promoted cell death in non-treated astrocytes; a fact that was associated with the presence of Aβ inside previously unloaded astrocytes. This phenomenon was inhibited by the presence of chlorpromazine in the co-incubation medium. These results suggest that astrocyte may perform Aβ transcytosis, a process that could play a role in the clearance of Aβ peptides from the brain to cerebrospinal fluid

    Datasets related to a study aimed to identify genetic markers of CDA by subphenotypes associated with cardiotoxicity

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    Who produced the data? The data has been created by the authors listed above. Is the title specific enough? "Datasets related to a study aimed to identify genetic markers of CDA by subphenotypes associated with cardiotoxicity." Why has the data been created? These datasets are supplementary material with which the principal and supplementary figures and tables of our indicated work were generated. What limitations do the data have (for example, sensitive data has been deleted)? All confidential patient information is not present. We have not had access to that information, following current legal regulations. How should the data be interpreted? These data sets should not be separated from the main article in which they were utilized. Thus, to better understand their context, researchers should see them in the global scenario of our work. Are there gaps in the data, or do they give a complete picture of the topic studied? As indicated above, data should be considered and interpreted in the global context of our study. What processes have generated the data? The processes that generated the data are indicated in the summary of the data above and individually for each of them. Thus, each dataset is accompanied by a legend within the document. What does the data measure in the columns of the files? As indicated, each dataset individually shows the information contained in the legend of each dataset. What software is required to be able to read the data? The datasets are in Excel format. How should the data be quoted? Researchers should cite the data in the context of the work they belong to once it is published and free of the embargo. Can the data be reused? What use licenses are assigned to you? In principle, yes. If additional clinical information is required, these data were previously published by some of us, and the references are included in our manuscript. These data are available from the principal investigators of the references listed in our work upon reasonable request. Are there more versions of the data? Where? I do not think so beyond our files and copies. Have the technical terms and acronyms referenced by the data been defined? A legend with the appropriate descriptions accompanies each dataset. Have the geographic and chronological parameters of the data been qualified? The authors of the work have generated the data. Elsewhere, we indicate the authors of the work, their contributions, and affiliations. Are keywords sufficiently data-specific? Are they based on any thesaurus? Keywords are based on our study. We include cardiotoxicity due to anthracyclines, missing heritability, subphenotype, pathophenotype, complex trait. What is the name of the research project in which the data are framed? The main research project in which the data is prepared is: Títle: "Chemotherapy cardiotoxicity in the elderly: a translational and personnel approach." Ref.: PIE14/00066 Who has financed data production and management? Each of the authors of the study has its funding. The grants are included in the acknowledgments section of our manuscript.Here we present a series of supplemental datasets that complement our study entitled "A Systems Genetics approach to identify genetic markers of cardiotoxicity due to anthracyclines in cancer patients." The datasets presented here were used to generate the main and supplementary figures and tables of the indicated study. The study consists of the identification of genetic markers of cardiotoxicity due to anthracyclines (CDA). CDA is a complex genesis disease or complex trait, and because of this, there is a component of missing heritability. Therefore, it is not possible to identify genetic markers associated with CDA risk. Here, we propose that molecular subphenotypes associated with the CDA may be a strategy for identifying some of this missing heritability and risk markers associated with it. A similar strategy could be applied to identify markers of other diseases of complex genesis. This study is done using a genetically heterogeneous cohort of mice that developed breast cancer and was treated with doxorubicin or a combined treatment of doxorubicin and docetaxel. The mouse cohort was generated by backcrossing, so each mouse is genetically unique. Post-chemotherapy heart damage was assessed by quantifying fibrosis's cardiac area and the thickness of myocardial fibers. The genetic regions associated with CDA were assessed by massive genotyping and genetic linkage analysis. Several molecular subphenotypes were quantified in the myocardium, and their association with the CDA was evaluated. Subsequently, we identified which of them were most statistically associated with CDA in multivariate models. Moreover, which complex trait loci (QTLs) associated with molecular subphenotypes best explained CDA. This strategy served to identify in the cohort of mice genes whose allelic forms could be candidates for the risk of CDA. Allelic variants of these genes were evaluated in four cohorts of cancer patients treated with anthracyclines and whose CDA was evaluated by echocardiography or cardiac magnetic resonance imaging (CMR).JPL laboratory was partially supported by the European Regional Development Fund (ERDF) and the Ministry of Science, Innovation, and Universities (SAF2014-56989-R, SAF2017-88854R), the Carlos III Health Institute (PIE14/00066), "Proyectos Integrados IBSAL 2015" (IBY15/00003), the Regional Government of Castile and Leon (CSI234P18), and "We can be heroes" Foundation. AGN laboratory and human patients' study are supported by funds from the ISCIII project grant (PI18/01242). The Human Genotyping unit is a member of CeGen, PRB3, and is supported by grant PT17/0019, of the PE I+D+i 2013-2016, funded by ISCIII and ERDF. SCLL was the recipient of a Ramón y Cajal research contract from the Spanish Ministry of Economy and Competitiveness, and the work was supported by MINECO/FEDER research grants (RTI2018-094130-B-100). The Proteomics Unit belongs to ProteoRed, PRB3-ISCIII, supported by grant PT17/0019/0023, of the PE I + D + I 2017-2020, funded by ISCIII and FEDER. RCC is funded by fellowships from the Spanish Regional Government of Castile and León. NGS is a recipient of an FPU fellowship (MINECO/FEDER). hiPSC-CM studies were funded in part by the "la Caixa" Banking Foundation under the project code HR18-00304" and Severo Ochoa CNIC Intramural Project (Expediente 12-2016 IGP) to JJ.Supplemental Dataset 1: CDA pathophenotypes after doxorubicin treatment. We treated 71 mice carrying breast cancer with doxorubicin. Each mouse was generated by backcrossing; thus, each one is genetically unique. Cardiotoxicity due to anthracyclines (CDA) was evaluated by automatically quantifying the heart fibrosis area and the average area of myocardial fibers as pathophenotypes of cardiotoxicity using the Ariol slide scanner. The histopathological damage was evaluated in the subendocardium and subepicardium from five randomly chosen regions of each sample (averages in μm2 are shown).-- Supplemental Dataset 2: CDA pathophenotypes after the combined therapy. We treated 61 mice carrying breast cancer with the combined therapy with doxorubicin and docetaxel. Each mouse was generated by backcrossing; thus, each one is genetically unique. Cardiotoxicity due to anthracyclines (CDA) was evaluated by automatically quantifying the heart fibrosis area and the average area of myocardial fibers as pathophenotypes of cardiotoxicity using the Ariol slide scanner. The histopathological damage was evaluated in the subendocardium and subepicardium from five randomly chosen regions of each sample (averages in μm2 are shown).-- Supplemental Dataset 3: CDA subphenotypes after doxorubicin therapy. Myocardium molecular subphenotypes after doxorubicin therapy. Proteins were quantified by a multiplex bead array (Luminex). TGFβ units are shown in pg/mL. The rest of the protein levels are shown in molecular fluorescence intensity (MFI) Units. The telomeric length was quantified by QPCR (RQ units). miRNAs were quantified by QPCR (RQ units). QPCR analyses were assessed by the ΔΔCT method; we show the averages of triplicates.-- Supplemental Dataset 4: CDA subphenotypes after the combined therapy. Myocardium molecular subphenotypes after the combined therapy with doxorubicin and docetaxel. Proteins were quantified by a multiplex bead array (Luminex). TGFβ units are shown in pg/mL. The rest of the protein levels are shown in molecular fluorescence intensity (MFI) Units. The telomeric length was quantified by QPCR (RQ units). miRNAs were quantified by QPCR (RQ units). QPCR analyses were assessed by the ΔΔCT method; we show the averages of triplicates.-- Supplemental Dataset 5: Correlations identified between molecular subphenotype levels in the myocardium and pathophenotypes of cardiotoxicity due to anthracyclines (CDA) after doxorubicin therapy in all mice.-- Supplemental Dataset 6: Correlations identified between molecular subphenotype levels in the myocardium and pathophenotypes of cardiotoxicity due to anthracyclines (CDA) after doxorubicin therapy in young mice. Correlation of Spearman.-- Supplemental Dataset 7: Correlations identified between molecular subphenotype levels in the myocardium and pathophenotypes of cardiotoxicity due to anthracyclines (CDA) after doxorubicin therapy in old mice. Correlation of Spearman.-- Supplemental Dataset 8: Correlations identified between molecular subphenotype levels in the myocardium and pathophenotypes of cardiotoxicity due to anthracyclines (CDA) after the combined therapy in all mice. Correlation of Spearman.-- Supplemental Dataset 9: Correlations identified between molecular subphenotype levels in the myocardium and pathophenotypes of cardiotoxicity due to anthracyclines (CDA) after the combined therapy in young mice. Correlation of Spearman.-- Supplemental Dataset 10: Correlations identified between molecular subphenotype levels in the myocardium and pathophenotypes of cardiotoxicity due to anthracyclines (CDA) after the combined therapy in old mice. Correlation of Spearman.-- Supplemental Dataset 11: Linkage analysis of molecular subphenotype levels quantified in the myocardium. Lod scores after doxorubicin therapy in all mice. The Illumina Mouse Medium Density Linkage Panel Assay was used to genotype 130 F1BX mice at 1449 single nucleotide polymorphisms (SNPs). Genotypes were classified as FVB/FVB (F/F) or FVB/C57BL/6 (F/B). Ultimately, 806 SNPs are informative from the FVB and C57BL/6 mice; the average genomic distance between these SNPs was 9.9 Mb. The genotype proportion among the F1BX mice showed a normal distribution. Linkage analysis was carried out using interval mapping with the expectation-maximization (EM) algorithm and R/QTL software. The criteria for significant and suggestive linkages for single markers were chosen based on Lander and Kruglyak (see methods section of our manuscript).-- Supplemental Dataset 12: Linkage analysis of molecular subphenotype levels quantified in the myocardium. Lod scores after doxorubicin therapy in young mice. The Illumina Mouse Medium Density Linkage Panel Assay was used to genotype 130 F1BX mice at 1449 single nucleotide polymorphisms (SNPs). Genotypes were classified as FVB/FVB (F/F) or FVB/C57BL/6 (F/B). Ultimately, 806 SNPs are informative from the FVB and C57BL/6 mice; the average genomic distance between these SNPs was 9.9 Mb. The genotype proportion among the F1BX mice showed a normal distribution. Linkage analysis was carried out using interval mapping with the expectation-maximization (EM) algorithm and R/QTL software. The criteria for significant and suggestive linkages for single markers were chosen based on Lander and Kruglyak (see methods section of our manuscript).-- Supplemental Dataset 13: Linkage analysis of molecular subphenotype levels quantified in the myocardium. Lod scores after doxorubicin therapy in old mice. The Illumina Mouse Medium Density Linkage Panel Assay was used to genotype 130 F1BX mice at 1449 single nucleotide polymorphisms (SNPs). Genotypes were classified as FVB/FVB (F/F) or FVB/C57BL/6 (F/B). Ultimately, 806 SNPs are informative from the FVB and C57BL/6 mice; the average genomic distance between these SNPs was 9.9 Mb. The genotype proportion among the F1BX mice showed a normal distribution. Linkage analysis was carried out using interval mapping with the expectation-maximization (EM) algorithm and R/QTL software. The criteria for significant and suggestive linkages for single markers were chosen based on Lander and Kruglyak (see methods section of our manuscript).-- Supplemental Dataset 14: Linkage analysis of molecular subphenotype levels quantified in the myocardium. Lod scores after the combined therapy in all mice. The Illumina Mouse Medium Density Linkage Panel Assay was used to genotype 130 F1BX mice at 1449 single nucleotide polymorphisms (SNPs). Genotypes were classified as FVB/FVB (F/F) or FVB/C57BL/6 (F/B). Ultimately, 806 SNPs are informative from the FVB and C57BL/6 mice; the average genomic distance between these SNPs was 9.9 Mb. The genotype proportion among the F1BX mice showed a normal distribution. Linkage analysis was carried out using interval mapping with the expectation-maximization (EM) algorithm and R/QTL software. The criteria for significant and suggestive linkages for single markers were chosen based on Lander and Kruglyak (see methods section of our manuscript).-- Supplemental Dataset 15: Linkage analysis of molecular subphenotype levels quantified in the myocardium. Lod scores after the combined therapy in young mice. The Illumina Mouse Medium Density Linkage Panel Assay was used to genotype 130 F1BX mice at 1449 single nucleotide polymorphisms (SNPs). Genotypes were classified as FVB/FVB (F/F) or FVB/C57BL/6 (F/B). Ultimately, 806 SNPs are informative from the FVB and C57BL/6 mice; the average genomic distance between these SNPs was 9.9 Mb. The genotype proportion among the F1BX mice showed a normal distribution. Linkage analysis was carried out using interval mapping with the expectation-maximization (EM) algorithm and R/QTL software. The criteria for significant and suggestive linkages for single markers were chosen based on Lander and Kruglyak (see methods section of our manuscript).-- Supplemental Dataset 16: Linkage analysis of molecular subphenotype levels quantified in the myocardium. Lod scores after the combined therapy in old mice. The Illumina Mouse Medium Density Linkage Panel Assay was used to genotype 130 F1BX mice at 1449 single nucleotide polymorphisms (SNPs). Genotypes were classified as FVB/FVB (F/F) or FVB/C57BL/6 (F/B). Ultimately, 806 SNPs are informative from the FVB and C57BL/6 mice; the average genomic distance between these SNPs was 9.9 Mb. The genotype proportion among the F1BX mice showed a normal distribution. Linkage analysis was carried out using interval mapping with the expectation-maximization (EM) algorithm and R/QTL software. The criteria for significant and suggestive linkages for single markers were chosen based on Lander and Kruglyak (see methods section of our manuscript).-- Supplemental Dataset 17: Massive genotyping of mouse cohort treated with doxorubicin. The genome-wide scan was carried out at the Spanish National Centre of Genotyping (CeGEN) at the Spanish National Cancer Research Centre (CNIO, Madrid, Spain). The Illumina Mouse Medium Density Linkage Panel Assay was used to genotype 130 F1BX mice at 1449 single nucleotide polymorphisms (SNPs). Genotypes were classified as FVB/FVB (F/F) or FVB/C57BL/6 (F/B). Ultimately, 806 SNPs are informative from the FVB and C57BL/6 mice; the average genomic distance between these SNPs was 9.9 Mb. The genotype proportion among the F1BX mice showed a normal distribution.-- Supplemental Dataset 18: Massive genotyping of mouse cohort treated with the combined therapy. The genome-wide scan was carried out at the Spanish National Centre of Genotyping (CeGEN) at the Spanish National Cancer Research Centre (CNIO, Madrid, Spain). The Illumina Mouse Medium Density Linkage Panel Assay was used to genotype 130 F1BX mice at 1449 single nucleotide polymorphisms (SNPs). Genotypes were classified as FVB/FVB (F/F) or FVB/C57BL/6 (F/B). Ultimately, 806 SNPs are informative from the FVB and C57BL/6 mice; the average genomic distance between these SNPs was 9.9 Mb. The genotype proportion among the F1BX mice showed a normal distribution.-- Supplemental Dataset 19: Linkage analysis of CDA pathophenotypes quantified in the myocardium. Lod scores after doxorubicin therapy in all mice. The Illumina Mouse Medium Density Linkage Panel Assay was used to genotype 130 F1BX mice at 1449 single nucleotide polymorphisms (SNPs). Genotypes were classified as FVB/FVB (F/F) or FVB/C57BL/6 (F/B). Ultimately, 806 SNPs are informative from the FVB and C57BL/6 mice; the average genomic distance between these SNPs was 9.9 Mb. The genotype proportion among the F1BX mice showed a normal distribution. Linkage analysis was carried out using interval mapping with the expectation-maximization (EM) algorithm and R/QTL software. The criteria for significant and suggestive linkages for single markers were chosen based on Lander and Kruglyak (see methods section of our manuscript).-- Supplemental Dataset 20: Linkage analysis of CDA pathophenotypes quantified in the myocardium. Lod scores after doxorubicin therapy in young mice. The Illumina Mouse Medium Density Linkage Panel Assay was used to genotype 130 F1BX mice at 1449 single nucleotide polymorphisms (SNPs). Genotypes were classified as FVB/FVB (F/F) or FVB/C57BL/6 (F/B). Ultimately, 806 SNPs are informative from the FVB and C57BL/6 mice; the average genomic distance between these SNPs was 9.9 Mb. The genotype proportion among the F1BX mice showed a normal distribution. Linkage analysis was carried out using interval mapping with the expectation-maximization (EM) algorithm and R/QTL software. The criteria for significant and suggestive linkages for single markers were chosen based on Lander and Kruglyak (see methods section of our manuscript).-- Supplemental Dataset 21: Linkage analysis of CDA pathophenotypes quantified in the myocardium. Lod scores after doxorubicin therapy in old mice. The Illumina Mouse Medium Density Linkage Panel Assay was used to genotype 130 F1BX mice at 1449 single nucleotide polymorphisms (SNPs). Genotypes were classified as FVB/FVB (F/F) or FVB/C57BL/6 (F/B). Ultimately, 806 SNPs are informative from the FVB and C57BL/6 mice; the average genomic distance between these SNPs was 9.9 Mb. The genotype proportion among the F1BX mice showed a normal distribution. Linkage analysis was carried out using interval mapping with the expectation-maximization (EM) algorithm and R/QTL software. The criteria for significant and suggestive linkages for single markers were chosen based on Lander and Kruglyak (see methods section of our manuscript).-- Supplemental Dataset 22: Linkage analysis of CDA pathophenotypes quantified in the myocardium. Lod scores after the combined therapy in all mice. The Illumina Mouse Medium Density Linkage Panel Assay was used to genotype 130 F1BX mice at 1449 single nucleotide polymorphisms (SNPs). Genotypes were classified as FVB/FVB (F/F) or FVB/C57BL/6 (F/B). Ultimately, 806 SNPs are informative from the FVB and C57BL/6 mice; the average genomic distance between these SNPs was 9.9 Mb. The genotype proportion among the F1BX mice showed a normal distribution. Linkage analysis was carried out using interval mapping with the expectation-maximization (EM) algorithm and R/QTL software. The criteria for significant and suggestive linkages for single markers were chosen based on Lander and Kruglyak (see methods section of our manuscript).-- Supplemental Dataset 23: Linkage analysis of CDA pathophenotypes quantified in the myocardium. Lod scores after the combined therapy in young mice. The Illumina Mouse Medium Density Linkage Panel Assay was used to genotype 130 F1BX mice at 1449 single nucleotide polymorphisms (SNPs). Genotypes were classified as FVB/FVB (F/F) or FVB/C57BL/6 (F/B). Ultimately, 806 SNPs are informative from the FVB and C57BL/6 mice; the average genomic distance between these SNPs was 9.9 Mb. The genotype proportion among the F1BX mice showed a normal distribution. Linkage analysis was carried out using interval mapping with the expectation-maximization (EM) algorithm and R/QTL software. The criteria for significant and suggestive linkages for single markers were chosen based on Lander and Kruglyak (see methods section of our manuscript).-- Supplemental Dataset 24: Linkage analysis of CDA pathophenotypes quantified in the myocardium. Lod scores after the combined therapy in old mice. The Illumina Mouse Medium Density Linkage Panel Assay was used to genotype 130 F1BX mice at 1449 single nucleotide polymorphisms (SNPs). Genotypes were classified as FVB/FVB (F/F) or FVB/C57BL/6 (F/B). Ultimately, 806 SNPs are informative from the FVB and C57BL/6 mice; the average genomic distance between these SNPs was 9.9 Mb. The genotype proportion among the F1BX mice showed a normal distribution. Linkage analysis was carried out using interval mapping with the expectation-maximization (EM) algorithm and R/QTL software. The criteria for significant and suggestive linkages for single markers were chosen based on Lander and Kruglyak (see methods section of our manuscript).-- Supplemental Dataset 25: Human breast cancer cohort-1 genotyping. The association of genetic variants with CDA was evaluated in four patient cohorts p

    Intermediate Molecular Phenotypes to Identify Genetic Markers of Anthracycline-Induced Cardiotoxicity Risk

    No full text
    Cardiotoxicity due to anthracyclines (CDA) affects cancer patients, but we cannot predict who may suffer from this complication. CDA is a complex trait with a polygenic component that is mainly unidentified. We propose that levels of intermediate molecular phenotypes (IMPs) in the myocardium associated with histopathological damage could explain CDA susceptibility, so variants of genes encoding these IMPs could identify patients susceptible to this complication. Thus, a genetically heterogeneous cohort of mice (n = 165) generated by backcrossing were treated with doxorubicin and docetaxel. We quantified heart fibrosis using an Ariol slide scanner and intramyocardial levels of IMPs using multiplex bead arrays and QPCR. We identified quantitative trait loci linked to IMPs (ipQTLs) and cdaQTLs via linkage analysis. In three cancer patient cohorts, CDA was quantified using echocardiography or Cardiac Magnetic Resonance. CDA behaves as a complex trait in the mouse cohort. IMP levels in the myocardium were associated with CDA. ipQTLs integrated into genetic models with cdaQTLs account for more CDA phenotypic variation than that explained by cda-QTLs alone. Allelic forms of genes encoding IMPs associated with CDA in mice, including AKT1, MAPK14, MAPK8, STAT3, CAS3, and TP53, are genetic determinants of CDA in patients. Two genetic risk scores for pediatric patients (n = 71) and women with breast cancer (n = 420) were generated using machine-learning Least Absolute Shrinkage and Selection Operator (LASSO) regression. Thus, IMPs associated with heart damage identify genetic markers of CDA risk, thereby allowing more personalized patient management.Ministerio de Ciencia, Innovación y Universidades (España)European ComissionJunta de Castilla y LeónInstituto de Salud Carlos IIIMinisterio de Economía, Comercio y Empresa (España)Federación Española de Enfermedades RarasDepartamento de Defensa (Estados Unidos)National Institutes of Health (Estados Unidos)Universidad de California (Estados Unidos)Instituto Nacional del Cáncer (Estados Unidos)Fundación "la Caixa"Agencia Estatal de InvestigaciónDepto. de Estadística e Investigación OperativaFac. de FarmaciaTRUEpu
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