Institute of Psychiatry, King's College London, The James Black Centre, London, UK (G.P.D., R.H., S.T.); Translational Neurobiology Unit, Laboratory of Panic and Respiration, Institute of Psychiatry, Federal University of Rio de Janeiro, Rio de Janeiro, Brazil (G.P.D., M.C.N.B., A.C.D.dS.d.L., A.E.N.); MRC Centre for Developmental Neurobiology, King's College London, London, UK (M.C.N.B., R.H.).
Neuro Oncol. 2014 Apr;16(4):476-92. doi: 10.1093/neuonc/not321. Epub 2014 Jan 26.
The human brain is capable of generating new functional neurons throughout life, a phenomenon known as adult neurogenesis. The generation of new neurons is sustained throughout adulthood due to the proliferation and differentiation of adult neural stem cells. This process in humans is uniquely located in the subgranular zone of the dentate gyrus in the hippocampus. Adult hippocampal neurogenesis (AHN) is thought to play a major role in hippocampus-dependent functions, such as spatial awareness, long-term memory, emotionality, and mood. The overall aim of current treatments for cancer (such as radiotherapy and chemotherapy) is to prevent aberrant cell division of cell populations associated with malignancy. However, the treatments in question are absolutist in nature and hence inhibit all cell division. An unintended consequence of this cessation of cell division is the impairment of adult neural stem cell proliferation and AHN. Patients undergoing treatment for cancerous malignancies often display specific forms of memory deficits, as well as depressive symptoms. This review aims to discuss the effects of cancer treatments on AHN and propose a link between the inhibition of the neurogenetic process in the hippocampus and the advent of the cognitive and mood-based deficits observed in patients and animal models undergoing cancer therapies. Possible evidence for coadjuvant interventions aiming to protect neural cells, and subsequently the mood and cognitive functions they regulate, from the ablative effects of cancer treatment are discussed as potential clinical tools to improve mental health among cancer patients.
人类大脑在一生中能够产生新的功能性神经元,这一现象被称为成年神经发生。由于成人神经干细胞的增殖和分化,新神经元的产生在成年期持续存在。在人类中,这个过程独特地位于海马回齿状回的颗粒下区。成年海马神经发生(AHN)被认为在海马依赖的功能中发挥主要作用,例如空间意识、长期记忆、情绪和情绪。目前癌症治疗(如放疗和化疗)的总体目标是防止与恶性肿瘤相关的细胞群体的异常细胞分裂。然而,所讨论的治疗方法本质上是绝对的,因此会抑制所有细胞分裂。细胞分裂停止的一个意外后果是成年神经干细胞增殖和 AHN 的受损。接受癌症恶性肿瘤治疗的患者常表现出特定形式的记忆缺陷以及抑郁症状。本综述旨在讨论癌症治疗对 AHN 的影响,并提出海马体中神经发生过程的抑制与接受癌症治疗的患者和动物模型中观察到的认知和基于情绪的缺陷之间的联系。讨论了旨在保护神经细胞(以及它们调节的情绪和认知功能)免受癌症治疗的消融作用的辅助干预措施的可能证据,作为改善癌症患者心理健康的潜在临床工具。