| Literature DB >> 34643772 |
Jeena John1, Manas Kinra1, Jayesh Mudgal1, G L Viswanatha2, K Nandakumar3.
Abstract
RATIONALE: Chemotherapy-induced cognitive impairment (CICI), chemobrain, and chemofog are the common terms for mental dysfunction in a cancer patient/survivor under the influence of chemotherapeutics. CICI is manifested as short/long term memory problems and delayed mental processing, which interferes with a person's day-to-day activities. Understanding CICI mechanisms help in developing therapeutic interventions that may alleviate the disease condition. Animal models facilitate critical evaluation to elucidate the underlying mechanisms and form an integral part of verifying different treatment hypotheses and strategies.Entities:
Keywords: Animal models; Chemobrain; Chemotherapeutic agents; Cognitive impairment
Mesh:
Substances:
Year: 2021 PMID: 34643772 PMCID: PMC8605973 DOI: 10.1007/s00213-021-05977-7
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Psychopharmacology (Berl) ISSN: 0033-3158 Impact factor: 4.415
Fig. 1Possible cellular mechanisms of chemobrain and the resulting cognitive deficits
Fig. 2Classification of animal models of chemobrain
Different animal models of doxorubicin inducing cognitive dysfunction
| Species | Dose & route of administration | Comments | Reference |
|---|---|---|---|
| Male Sprague–Dawley rats (200–250 g) | 2 mg/kg/week, | • Enhanced NF-κb (p65), COX-II/TNF-α, GFAP • Inhibition of LTP in hippocampus and dentate gyrus | (Ali et al. |
| Female Wistar rats (12 weeks old) | 2.5 mg/kg, | • Increased levels of TNF-α in hippocampus and frontal regions • Impaired episodic memory in NORT | (Ramalingayya et al. |
| Male B6C3 mice (8 weeks old) | Single injection 20 mg/kg, | • Increased caspase-3, TUNEL-positive cells, TNF-α, p53, Bax levels • Decline in brain mitochondrial respiration | (Tangpong et al. |
| Male Wistar rats (6 weeks old) | 3.5 mg/kg/week, | • Elevated levels of TNF-α, iNOS and COX-2 | (Leung et al. |
| Male Sprague–Dawley rats (6 weeks old) | 2 mg/kg/week, | • Impaired spatial memory in MWM task | (Tong et al. |
| Male Wistar rats (2–3 months old) | Single escalating doses 0.8,2, 8 mg/kg, | • Impaired long-term aversive learning • Impaired innate exploratory behavior | (Liedke et al. |
Different animal models of cyclophosphamide inducing cognitive dysfunction
| Species | Dose & route of administration | Comments | Reference |
|---|---|---|---|
| Male Swiss mice (35–40 g) | Single injection 200 mg/kg, | • Enhanced NF-κb, TNF-α, IL-6, and IL-1β in frontal cortex and hippocampus • Reduced retention transfer in step-down latency test | (Iqubal et al. |
| Male Wistar rats (100–145 g) | Single injection 100 mg/kg, | • Increased levels of MDA, nitrites, and hydrogen peroxide • Reduced levels of catalase, superoxide dismutase, and glutathione S transferase | (Oyagbemi et al. |
| Male C57BL/6 mice (6–8 weeks old) | 200 mg/kg, | • Decline in spatial memory in reward-based spatial alternation paradigm | (Janelsins et al. |
| Male Sprague–Dawley rats (6–8 weeks old) | 25,50 mg/kg/week, | • Suppression of hippocampal neurogenesis • Impairment of spatial memory in MWM | (Wu et al. |
| Male Swiss Albino mice (6–8 weeks old) | Single injection 75 mg/kg, | • Increased levels of MDA, hydroperoxides and conjugated dienes | (Bhatia et al. |
| Male ICR mice(8–10 weeks old) | Single injection 40 mg/kg, | • Decreased levels of Ki-67 and DCX in hippocampus | (Yang et al. |
Different animal models of 5-fluorouracil inducing cognitive dysfunction
| Species | Dose & route of administration | Comments | Reference |
|---|---|---|---|
| Male Wistar rats (5 months old) | 25 mg/kg, | • Impaired attentional shifting • Reduced dopamine release | (Jarmolowicz et al. |
| Male Lister hooded rats (200–250 g) | Five injections 25 mg/kg, | • Induction of spatial memory deficits in OLT • Reduced levels of DCX and BDNF in hippocampus | (Mustafa et al. |
| Male Lister hooded rats (150–170 g) | Five injections 25 mg/kg, | • Decrease in freezing time in context-dependent conditional-response test • Reduced levels of Ki67 in subgranular zone of dentate gyrus | (ELBeltagy et al. |
| Male CBA mice (6–8 weeks old) | 40 mg/kg, | • Induction of apoptosis in subgranular zone of dentate gyrus • Loss of myelin integrity | (Han et al. |
| Male C57B16/J mice (6 months old) | 60 mg/kg, | • Reduction in spine density • Elevation in IL-17, IL-1β, and GMCSF in hippocampus | (Groves et al. |
Different animal models of Methotrexate inducing cognitive dysfunction
| Species | Dose & route of administration | Comments | Reference |
|---|---|---|---|
| Male Wistar rats (200–220 g) | 0.2 mg/kg/day, | • Increased peroxidation and reduction in GSH/GSSG ratio | (Rajamani et al. |
| Male C57BL/6 & CD1 mice | 100 mg/kg, | • Depletion of OPCs in white matter • Disruption of neuroplasticity • Chronic microglial activation | (Gibson et al. |
| Male Lister hooded rats (150–200 g) | 2 doses 75 mg/kg, | • Impairment of hippocampal neurogenesis • Reduced levels of Ki67, DCX, BrdU • Impaired spatial memory in OLT | (Lyons et al. |
| Male Sprague–Dawley rats (180–200 g) | Single injection 100 mg/kg, | • Increased endoplasmic stress and apoptosis • Spatial memory impairment in MWM | (Lv et al. |
| Female C57B16/J mice (1 month old) | Single injection 200 mg/kg, | • Folate depletion • Elevation in CSF tau and reduced hippocampal cell proliferation | (Elens et al. |
| Male Sprague–Dawley rats (4–5 weeks old) | Two doses 75 mg/kg/day, | • Spatial and episodic memory deficits in OLT and NORT respectively | (Sritawan et al. |
Different animal models of cisplatin inducing cognitive dysfunction
| Species | Dose & route of administration | Comments | Reference |
|---|---|---|---|
| Male C57BL/6 J mice | 2.3 mg/kg, | • Loss of dendritic arborization and lateral fibers in cingulate cortex • Neuronal mitochondrial damage | (Chiu et al. |
| Male C57BL/6 J mice (5–6 months old) | 2.3 mg/kg, | • Attention deficits in 5-choice serial reaction time task • Reduced expression of synaptophysin and VGlut2 | (Huo et al. |
| Male Wistar rats (5–6 weeks old) | 5 mg/kg/week, | • Increased levels of MDA, nitrites • Reduced levels of SOD, catalase, reduced glutathione • Impaired spatial and recognition memory in MWM and NORT respectively | (Jangra et al. |
| Male Sprague–Dawley rats (200–250 g) | 5 mg/kg/week, | • Reduced freezing in fear conditioning task • Episodic memory impairment in NORT | (Lomeli et al. |
| Male Wistar rats (18 months old) | 5 mg/kg/week, | • Increased MDA, protein carbonyls, iNOS, and nitrites • Decreased levels of catalase, SOD and reduced glutathione | (Chtourou et al. |
| Male Sprague–Dawley rats (post-natal day 25) | 2 mg/kg, | • Hippocampal-dependent impairment in NORT and fear conditioning task | (John et al. |
Different animal models of oxaliplatin inducing cognitive dysfunction
| Species | Dose & route of administration | Comments | Reference |
|---|---|---|---|
| Male hooded Wistar rats | Single injection 0.6,2,6 mg/kg, | • Impairment in recognition memory in NORT • Impaired spatial memory in OLT | (Fardell et al. |
| Male Sprague–Dawley rats (92 days old) | Single injection 12 mg/kg, | • Impaired renewal of fear in fear conditioning memory task | (Sharpe et al. |
| Male Wistar rats (12–15 weeks old) | 2.4 mg/kg, | • Loss of hippocampal volume | (Sadeghinezhad and Amrein |
| Male Sprague–Dawley rats (220–250 g) | 4 mg/kg/day, | • Decreased recognition index in NORT • Activation TNF-α/NF-κB signaling in the hippocampus | (Zhou et al. |
| Male Wistar rats (150–200 g) | 4 mg/kg, | • Increased MDA, protein carbonyls and glutathione depletion in brain mitochondria • Activation of caspase 3 and inactivation of Bcl-2 • Neurotoxicity and mitochondrial dysfunction | (Waseem et al. |
Different animal models of docetaxel inducing cognitive dysfunction
| Species | Dose & route of administration | Comments | Reference |
|---|---|---|---|
| Male CD1 mice (27–33 g) | 8 mg/kg, | • Impairment in recognition memory in NORT • Impaired spatial memory in MWM | (Fardell et al. |
| Male Sprague–Dawley rats (220–250 g) | Single injection 30 mg/kg, | • Increased levels of MDA, p38α, MAPK, TNF-α, GFAP, NF-κB • Decreased levels of glutathione, SOD, catalase, Nrf-2, NCAM, and HO1 | (Yardım et al. |
| Male Han Wistar rats (4–5 months old) | 1 mg/kg/week, | • Reduced exploration and spatial memory deficits in object exploration task | (Callaghan and O’Mara |
| Male Hooded Wistar rats | Long term treatment (6,10 mg/kg/week, Short-term treatment single injection (10 mg/kg, | • Cognitive impairments in NORT and MWM | (Fardell et al. |
| Male C57BL/6 J mice (11 weeks old) | Single injection 33 mg/kg, | • Cognitive impairments in OLT and SCRTT • Short-term memory and attentional deficits | (Seigers et al. |
Different animal models of paclitaxel inducing cognitive dysfunction
| Species | Dose & route of administration | Comments | Reference |
|---|---|---|---|
| Male Sprague–Dawley rats (6–8 weeks old) | 2 mg/kg/day, | • Neuronal apoptosis • Impaired spatial memory in MWM • Increased number of TUNEL-positive cells, TNF-α and IL-β in the hippocampus | (Li et al. |
| Male C57BL/6 mice (9 weeks old) | 12 injections 20 mg/kg, | • Impaired spatial memory in MWM | (Huehnchen et al. |
| Male C57BL/6 mice | Acute: 10 mg/kg/day, Chronic:10 mg/kg/day, | • Decrease in the testicular zinc levels and ZnT3 expression in hippocampus • Spatial memory deficits in MWM | (Lee et al. |
| Male Sprague–Dawley rats (10 months old) | 2 mg/kg, | • Reduced number of Ki67 and BrdU positive cells • Reduced hippocampal neurogenesis | (Panoz-Brown et al. |
Different animal models of Temozolomide inducing cognitive dysfunction
| Species | Dose & route of administration | Comments | Reference |
|---|---|---|---|
| Male Wistar rats (12 weeks old) | 18 mg/kg, | • Increased MDA and reduced SOD, catalase • Impaired episodic memory in NORT | (Pathak et al. |
| Male Sprague–Dawley rats (60–75 days old) | 25 mg/kg, | • Impaired hippocampal neurogenesis and endogenous theta activity • Difficulty in learning and memory | (Nokia et al. |
Different animal models of colchicine inducing cognitive dysfunction
| Species | Dose & route of administration | Comments | Reference |
|---|---|---|---|
| Male Wistar rats (2–3 months old) | 15 µg/5 µl in ACSF, | • Impaired spatial memory in MWM • Increased MDA & Acetylcholine esterase (AChE) levels • Decreased catalase & SOD levels | (John et al. |
| Male Swiss albino mice (25–30 g) | 1 & 3 µg/10 µl in ACSF, | • Impaired spatial memory in MWM • Increased levels of MDA and nitrite • Decreased glutathione level | (Awasthi et al. |
| Male Wistar albino rats (180–200 g) | 7.5 µg/5 µl in ACSF, | • Increased TBARS, nitric oxide, IL-1β, IL-6, and TNF-α levels • Reduced levels of SOD and glutathione | (Essawy et al. |
| Male Wistar rats (80–100 g) | 15,30,60,120 µg/kg in saline, | • Deficits in food rewarding operant responding paradigm | (Bensimon and Chermat |
Different animal models of streptozotocin inducing cognitive dysfunction
| Species | Dose & route of administration | Comments | Reference |
|---|---|---|---|
| Male Wistar rats (210–230 g) | 65 mg/kg, | • Impaired spatial memory in MWM • Increased IL-1β, IL-6, and TNF-α levels | (Liu et al. |
| Male C57BL/6 J mice (8–10 weeks old) | 180 mg/kg, | • Impaired spatial memory in MWM • Enhanced levels of MDA, IL-1β, IL-6, and TNF-α levels • Decreased SOD level | (Wang et al. |
| Male Wistar rats (5–7 month old) | 3 mg/kg in 10 µl ACSF, | • Increased AChE, MDA, nitrite, and lactate dehydrogenase activity • Decreased level of glutathione | (Deshmukh et al. |
| Male albino mice (25–30 g) | 3 mg/kg in 10 µl ACSF, | • Impaired spatial memory in MWM and episodic memory in NORT • Enhanced levels of MDA, IL-6, and TNF-α levels | (El Sayed and Ghoneum |
Combination of different chemotherapeutic agents used in different animal models and their respective changes leading to chemobrain
| Species | Drugs | Comments | Reference |
|---|---|---|---|
| Ovariectomized Sprague–Dawley rats (8 weeks old) | CPP (40 mg/kg/week, DOX (4 mg/kg/week, | • Impaired contextual fear memory in classical fear conditioning task | (MacLeod et al. |
| C57BI6/J female mice (6 months old) | CPP (60 mg/kg/week, MTX (4 mg/kg/week, 5-FU (60 mg/kg/week, | • Decrease in number of mushroom spines of dentate gyrus • Impairment in long-term memory | (Anderson et al. |
| Female Wistar rats (4 months old) | CPP (40 mg/kg/week, MTX (37.5 mg/kg/week, 5-FU (75 mg/kg/week, | • Decreased hippocampal cell proliferation • Impaired learning and memory in MWM | (Briones and Woods |
| Female C57B/BL6J mice (18–20 g) | DTX (10 mg/kg, DOX (10 mg/kg, CPP (40 mg/kg, | • Increased escape latency • Increased time for first entry into targeted quadrant • Increased levels of IL-6 and TNF-α & decreased levels of IL-10 and IL-4 | (Shi et al. |
| Female Sprague–Dawley rats (10 months old) | Adriamycin (2.5 mg/kg, Cytoxan (25 mg/kg, 4 doses at weekly intervals | • Impaired memory in passive avoidance test | (Konat et al. |
| Female BALB/C mice (3 months old) | MTX (50 mg/kg/week, 5-FU (75 mg/kg/week, | • Impaired cognitive performance in spatial memory, cued memory, non-matching to sample (NMTS), delayed NMTS | (Winocur et al. |
| Female Wistar rats (2–4 months old) | CPP (40 mg/kg/week, MTX (37.5 mg/kg/week, 5-FU (75 mg/kg/week, | • Impaired working memory in OLT | (Larkov et al. 2016) |
| Female C57B/BL6J mice (16 weeks old) | CPP (50 mg/kg/week, DOX (2 mg/kg/week, for 4 weeks + PTX (2 mg/kg/week, | • Impaired spatial memory • Decreased dendrite length in the hippocampus | (McElroy et al. |
| Female BALB/C mice (8 weeks old) | CPP (25 mg/kg/week, DOX (2.5 mg/kg/week, | • Impaired spatial memory in MWM | (Philpot et al. |
| Male hooded Wistar rats (265–369 g) | Single injection OX (12 mg/kg, 5-FU (75 mg/kg, | • Impaired contextual fear recall • Impaired episodic memory in NORT | (Fardell et al. |
| Male Swiss albino mice(8–10 weeks old) | CPP (50 mg/kg/week, MTX (5 mg/kg/week, 5-FU (5 mg/kg/week, | • Impaired spatial memory in MWM • Increased MDA and decreased catalase | (Kinra et al. |
| Male C57BL/6Hsd mice (7–8 weeks old) | MTX (37.5 mg/kg/week, 5-FU (75 mg/kg/week, | • Decreased ability to gate incoming auditory stimuli • Decreased adaptation to novel objects in NORT | (Gandal et al. |
| Female Sprague–Dawley rats (12 months old) | CPP (40 mg/kg/week, MTX (37.5 mg/kg/week, 5-FU (75 mg/kg/week, | • Increased levels of inflammatory mediators like TNF-α, IL-1β, and COX-II decreased level of anti-inflammatory mediator IL-10 • Decrease in the level of oligodendrocyte precursor cells (OPCs) and reduction in myelin sheath thickness and myelinated axons | (Briones and Woods |
| Male Swiss Webster mice (20–25 g) | MTX (32 mg/kg/week, 5-FU (75 mg/kg/week, | • Impaired learning and memory in autoshaping responding procedure | (Walker et al. |