Pharmacological or genetic depletion of senescent astrocytes prevents whole brain
irradiation–induced impairment of neurovascular coupling responses protecting cognitive
function in mice
Whole brain irradiation (WBI, also known as whole brain radiation therapy or WBRT)
is a mainstream therapy for patients with identifiable brain metastases and as a prophylaxis
for microscopic malignancies. WBI accelerates brain aging, causing progressive cognitive
dysfunction in ~ 50% of surviving patients, thus compromising quality of life. The
mechanisms responsible for this WBI side effect remain obscure, and there are no effective
treatments or prevention strategies. Here, we test the hypothesis that WBI induces
astrocyte senescence, which contributes to impaired astrocytic neurovascular coupling
(NVC) responses and the genesis of cognitive decline. To achieve this goal, we used
transgenic p16-3MR mice, which allows the detection and selective elimination of senescent
cells. We subjected these mice to a clinically relevant protocol of fractionated WBI
(5 Gy twice weekly for 4 weeks). WBI-treated and control mice were tested for spatial
memory performance (radial arm water maze), astrocyte-dependent NVC responses (whisker-stimulation-induced
increases in cerebral blood flow, assessed by laser speckle contrast imaging), NVC-related
gene expression, astrocytic release of eicosanoid gliotransmitters and the presence
of senescent astrocytes (by flow cytometry, immunohistochemistry and gene expression
profiling) at 6 months post-irradiation. WBI induced senescence in astrocytes, which
associated with NVC dysfunction and impaired performance on cognitive tasks. To establish
a causal relationship between WBI-induced senescence and NVC dysfunction, senescent
cells were depleted from WBI-treated animals (at 3 months post-WBI) by genetic (ganciclovir
treatment) or pharmacological (treatment with the BCL-2/BCL-xL inhibitor ABT263/Navitoclax,
a known senolytic drug) means. In WBI-treated mice, both treatments effectively eliminated
senescent astrocytes, rescued NVC responses, and improved cognitive performance. Our
findings suggest that the use of senolytic drugs can be a promising strategy for preventing
the cognitive impairment associated with WBI.