AI Article Synopsis

  • Chemotherapy can cause problems with thinking and memory for cancer patients, which is called chemobrain, and it affects their quality of life, especially in breast cancer patients.
  • New research suggests that special brain cells called microglia play a big role in this problem, and certain chemotherapy drugs might harm these cells more than the cancer cells themselves.
  • The study found that two drugs, cyclophosphamide and epirubicin, are much more toxic to microglia than to breast cancer cells, causing cell damage and activating a response that can lead to inflammation.

Article Abstract

Chemotherapy Related Cognitive Impairment (CRCI), also called chemobrain, diminishes cancer patient's life quality. Breast cancer (BC) patients have been described to be importantly affected, however, the mechanism leading to CRCI has not been fully elucidated. Recent research proposes microglia as the main architect of CRCI, thus dysregulations in these cells could trigger CRCI. The aim of this research was to evaluate the effects of two drugs commonly used against breast cancer, cyclophosphamide (CTX) and epirubicin (EPI), on the microglia cell line SIM-A9, using the BC cell line, 4T1, as a control. Our results show that CTX and EPI decrease microglia-cell viability and increase cell death on a concentration-dependent manner, being 5 and 2 times more cytotoxic to microglia cell line than to breast cancer 4T1cells, respectively. Both chemotherapies induce cell cycle arrest and a significant increase in p53, p16 and γ-H2AX in breast cancer and microglia cells. Furthermore, mitochondrial membrane potential (ΔΨm) diminishes as cell death increases, and both chemotherapies induce reactive oxygen species (ROS) production on SIM-A9 and 4T1. Moreover, caspase activation increases with treatments and its pharmacological blockade inhibits CTX and EPI induced-cell death. Finally, low concentrations of CTX and EPI induce γ-H2AX, and EPI induces cytokine release, NO production and Iba-1 overexpression. These findings indicate that microglia cells are more sensitive to CTX and EPI than BC cells and undergo DNA damage and cell cycle arrest at very low concentrations, moreover EPI induces microglia activation and a pro-inflammatory profile.

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http://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pmc/articles/PMC8822306PMC
http://dx.doi.org/10.17179/excli2021-4160DOI Listing

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