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Failure of senolytic treatment to prevent cognitive decline in a female rodent model of aging
Asha Rani, Linda A. Bean, Vivekananda Budamagunta, Ashok Kumar, Thomas C. Foster
Frontiers in Aging Neuroscience · 2024 · ▲ 16 citations
Abstract
There are sex differences in vulnerability and resilience to the stressors of aging and subsequent age-related cognitive decline. Cellular senescence(definition) occurs as a response to damaging or stress-inducing stimuli. The response includes a state of irreversible growth arrest, the development of a senescence-associated secretory phenotype, and the release of pro-inflammatory cytokines associated with aging and age-related diseases. Senolytics(definition) are compounds designed to eliminate senescent cells. Our recent work indicates that senolytic treatment preserves cognitive function in aging male F344 rats. The current study examined the effect of senolytic treatment on cognitive function in aging female rats. Female F344 rats (12 months) were treated with dasatinib (1.2 mg/kg) + quercetin (12 mg/kg) or ABT-263 (12 mg/kg) or vehicle for 7 months. Examination of the estrus cycle indicated that females had undergone estropause during treatment. Senolytic treatment may have increased sex differences in behavioral stress responsivity, particularly for the initial training on the cued version of the watermaze. However, pre-training on the cue task reduced stress responsivity for subsequent spatial training and all groups learned the spatial discrimination. In contrast to preserved memory observed in senolytic-treated males, all older females exhibited impaired episodic memory relative to young (6-month) females. We suggest that the senolytic treatment may not have been able to compensate for the loss of estradiol, which can act on aging mechanisms for anxiety and memory independent of cellular senescence.
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- 10.3389/fnagi.2024.1384554
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- 2026-06-15 MST
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APA
Rani, A., Bean, L.A., Budamagunta, V., Kumar, A., & Foster, T.C. (2024). Failure of senolytic treatment to prevent cognitive decline in a female rodent model of aging. <em>Frontiers in Aging Neuroscience</em>. https://doi.org/10.3389/fnagi.2024.1384554
Vancouver
Rani A, Bean LA, Budamagunta V, Kumar A, Foster TC. Failure of senolytic treatment to prevent cognitive decline in a female rodent model of aging. Frontiers in Aging Neuroscience. 2024. doi:10.3389/fnagi.2024.1384554.
BibTeX
@article{asha2024Failur,
title = {Failure of senolytic treatment to prevent cognitive decline in a female rodent model of aging},
author = {Asha Rani and Linda A. Bean and Vivekananda Budamagunta and Ashok Kumar and Thomas C. Foster},
journal = {Frontiers in Aging Neuroscience},
year = {2024},
doi = {10.3389/fnagi.2024.1384554},
}
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