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Supplementary Figure S1 from Radiotherapy-Induced Neurocognitive Impairment Is Driven by Heightened Apoptotic Priming in Early Life and Prevented by Blocking BAX

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posted on 2023-10-13, 07:20 authored by Rumani Singh, Stacey Yu, Marwa Osman, Zintis Inde, Cameron Fraser, Abigail H. Cleveland, Nicole Almanzar, Chuan Bian Lim, Gaurav N. Joshi, Johan Spetz, Xingping Qin, Sneh M. Toprani, Zachary Nagel, Matthew C. Hocking, Robert A. Cormack, Torunn I. Yock, Jeffrey W. Miller, Zhi-Min Yuan, Timothy Gershon, Kristopher A. Sarosiek

Supplementary Figure S1

Funding

Alex's Lemonade Stand Foundation for Childhood Cancer (ALSF)

Andrew McDonough B+ Foundation (AMBF)

St. Baldrick's Foundation (SBF)

Making Headway Foundation (Making Headway Foundation Inc.)

Charles H. Hood Foundation (CHF)

National Cancer Institute (NCI)

United States Department of Health and Human Services

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National Institute of Diabetes and Digestive and Kidney Diseases (NIDDK)

United States Department of Health and Human Services

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Blavatnik Family Foundation (BFF)

National Institute of Environmental Health Sciences (NIEHS)

United States Department of Health and Human Services

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ARTICLE ABSTRACT

Although external beam radiotherapy (xRT) is commonly used to treat central nervous system (CNS) tumors in patients of all ages, young children treated with xRT frequently experience life-altering and dose-limiting neurocognitive impairment (NI) while adults do not. The lack of understanding of mechanisms responsible for these differences has impeded the development of neuroprotective treatments. Using a newly developed mouse model of xRT-induced NI, we found that neurocognitive function is impaired by ionizing radiation in a dose- and age-dependent manner, with the youngest animals being most affected. Histologic analysis revealed xRT-driven neuronal degeneration and cell death in neurogenic brain regions in young animals but not adults. BH3 profiling showed that neural stem and progenitor cells, neurons, and astrocytes in young mice are highly primed for apoptosis, rendering them hypersensitive to genotoxic damage. Analysis of single-cell RNA sequencing data revealed that neural cell vulnerability stems from heightened expression of proapoptotic genes including BAX, which is associated with developmental and mitogenic signaling by MYC. xRT induced apoptosis in primed neural cells by triggering a p53- and PUMA-initiated, proapoptotic feedback loop requiring cleavage of BID and culminating in BAX oligomerization and caspase activation. Notably, loss of BAX protected against apoptosis induced by proapoptotic signaling in vitro and prevented xRT-induced apoptosis in neural cells in vivo as well as neurocognitive sequelae. On the basis of these findings, preventing xRT-induced apoptosis specifically in immature neural cells by blocking BAX, BIM, or BID via direct or upstream mechanisms is expected to ameliorate NI in pediatric patients with CNS tumor. Age- and differentiation-dependent apoptotic priming plays a pivotal role in driving radiotherapy-induced neurocognitive impairment and can be targeted for neuroprotection in pediatric patients.

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