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Inflammation plays a causal role in fatigue-like behavior induced by pelvic irradiation in mice

Authors :
Paul Juneau
Leorey N. Saligan
Li Rebekah Feng
Sarah Alshawi
Brian S. Wolff
Source :
Brain, Behavior, & Immunity-Health, Brain, Behavior, & Immunity-Health, Vol 15, Iss, Pp 100264-(2021)
Publication Year :
2021

Abstract

Fatigue is a persistent and debilitating symptom following radiation therapy for prostate cancer. However, it is not well-understood how radiation targeted to a small region of the body can lead to broad changes in behavior. In this study, we used targeted pelvic irradiation of healthy male mice to test whether inflammatory signaling mediates changes in voluntary physical activity levels. First, we tested the relationship between radiation dose, blood cell counts, and fatigue-like behavior measured as voluntary wheel-running activity. Next, we used oral minocycline treatments to reduce inflammation and found that minocycline reduces, but does not eliminate, the fatigue-like behavioral changes induced by radiation. We also used a strain of mice lacking the MyD88 adaptor protein and found that these mice also showed less fatigue-like behavior than the wild-type controls. Finally, using serum and brain tissue samples, we determined changes in inflammatory signaling induced by irradiation in wild-type, minocycline treated, and MyD88 knockout mice. We found that irradiation increased serum levels of IL-6, a change that was partially reversed in mice treated with minocycline or lacking MyD88. Overall, our results suggest that inflammation plays a causal role in radiation-induced fatigue and that IL-6 may be an important mediator.<br />Highlights • Pelvic irradiation leads to fatigue-like behavior that is dose-dependent. • Radiation increases serum levels of many cytokines, including IL-6. • Minocycline treatment can reduce radiation-induced fatigue and serum IL-6. • MyD88 gene deletion can reduce radiation-induced fatigue and serum IL-6.

Details

ISSN :
26663546
Volume :
15
Database :
OpenAIRE
Journal :
Brain, behavior,immunity - health
Accession number :
edsair.doi.dedup.....09202ee7983c0ab6a68176b76792b388