(Semmelweis Egyetem által biztosított nyílt hozzáférésű finanszírozás)
(LP-2021-14)
(NVKP-16-1-2016-0017 National Heart Program) Támogató: NKFIH
(OTKA-FK-134751)
Új Nemzeti Kiválósági Program(ÚNKP-21-3-II) Támogató: Innovációs és Technológiai Minisztérium
(EFOP-3.6.3.-VEKOP-16-2017-00009)
(RRF- 2.3.1-21-2022-00003)
(TKP2021-EGA)
Szakterületek:
Gyógyszerészet, farmakogenomika, gyógyszerkutatás és tervezés, gyógyszeres kezelés
Despite accumulating data on underlying mechanisms, the influence of sex and prevalent
cardio-metabolic co-morbidities on the manifestation and severity of immune checkpoint
inhibitor (ICI)-induced cardiotoxicity has not been well defined. To elucidate whether
sex and prevalent cardio-metabolic co-morbidities affect ICI-induced cardiotoxicity,
we randomized 17-month-old male and female mice to receive control diet (CON) or high-fat
diet (HFD) + L-NAME-a well-established mouse model of cardio-metabolic co-morbidities-for
17 weeks (n = 5-7), and evaluated markers of T-cell function in the spleen. As expected,
HFD + L-NAME significantly increased body- and heart weight, and serum cholesterol
levels, and caused no systolic dysfunction, however, led to diastolic dysfunction,
cardiomyocyte hypertrophy, and increased fibrosis only in males compared to corresponding
CON. Western blot analyses of splenic immune checkpoint protein levels showed differential
expression depending on sex and prevalent cardio-metabolic co-morbidities, suggesting
T-cell exhaustion in both sexes on HFD + L-NAME, but more pronounced in males. In
a sub-study with a similar setup, we tested cardiotoxic manifestations of ICI by treating
mice with anti-PD-1 monoclonal antibody (ICI) for the last 2 weeks of diet administration
(n = 5-7). After 2 weeks of ICI treatment, cardiac systolic functions significantly
decreased in CON, but not in HFD + L-NAME groups of both sexes compared to baseline
(before ICI administration). In conclusion, in this exploratory study using aged mice,
we describe for the first time that ICI-related systolic dysfunction is diminished
in both sexes when obesity and hypercholesterolemia are present, possibly due to obesity-related
T-cell exhaustion.