Seng Melina M, Tapp Zoe M, Glasper Erica R, Pyter Leah M
Institute for Behavioral Medicine Research, College of Medicine, The Ohio State University Wexner Medical Center, Columbus, Ohio 43210.
Departments of Neuroscience, College of Medicine, The Ohio State University Wexner Medical Center, Columbus, Ohio 43210.
eNeuro. 2025 Sep 22;12(9). doi: 10.1523/ENEURO.0159-25.2025. Print 2025 Sep.
Chemotherapy can cause debilitating behavioral side effects (e.g., fatigue, depression, cognitive decline); however, having an intimate partner can buffer these effects. The California mouse () is a rare monogamous mouse species that offers a novel opportunity to model human intimate partnership to identify the neurobiological mechanisms by which mate bonding reduces chemotherapy-associated behavioral side effects. As a first step toward this goal, this pilot study aimed to develop the first chemotherapy model, to our knowledge, in adult male and female California mice. Following a repeated paclitaxel chemotherapy regimen, well characterized in laboratory mice (), gross sickness physiology was first assessed after various doses. The 20 mg/kg paclitaxel dose, injected six times every other day, was the highest tolerable, clinically relevant dose and was characterized by moderate body mass loss and increased spleen mass. Thus, further investigation of the effects of this chemotherapy paradigm on peripheral and neural inflammatory gene expression, based on previous reports in laboratory mice, was undertaken; results were mixed. Consistent across the spleen, hippocampus, and hypothalamus, some proinflammatory genes were unexpectedly decreased with chemotherapy (, ), whereas one gene was increased (). Chemotherapy also increased fatigue and sociability, but not anxiety-like behavior or cognition. Taken together, this pilot study characterized a translational model of chemotherapy in California mice with clinically relevant gross physiological changes and modest changes in neuroinflammation and behavioral side effects. This work also highlights the need for comparative studies and the growth of research tools for this socially relevant mouse species.
化疗会引发使人虚弱的行为副作用(例如疲劳、抑郁、认知衰退);然而,拥有亲密伴侣能够缓冲这些影响。加州小鼠()是一种罕见的实行一夫一妻制的小鼠物种,它为模拟人类亲密伴侣关系以确定伴侣关系减轻化疗相关行为副作用的神经生物学机制提供了新的契机。作为朝着这一目标迈出的第一步,据我们所知,这项初步研究旨在建立首个针对成年雄性和雌性加州小鼠的化疗模型。在重复使用紫杉醇化疗方案后(该方案在实验室小鼠中已有充分研究),首先评估了不同剂量后的总体疾病生理学情况。20毫克/千克的紫杉醇剂量,每隔一天注射六次,是可耐受的最高临床相关剂量,其特征为体重适度减轻和脾脏肿大。因此,基于之前在实验室小鼠中的报告,进一步研究了这种化疗模式对外周和神经炎症基因表达的影响;结果喜忧参半。在脾脏、海马体和下丘脑均一致发现,一些促炎基因在化疗后意外减少(,),而有一个基因增加了()。化疗还增加了疲劳感和社交性,但未增加焦虑样行为或认知。综上所述,这项初步研究描绘了加州小鼠化疗的转化模型,该模型具有临床相关的总体生理变化以及神经炎症和行为副作用的适度变化。这项工作还凸显了对这种具有社会相关性的小鼠物种进行比较研究以及开发研究工具的必要性。