左乙拉西坦调节阿尔茨海默病5XFAD小鼠模型的脑代谢网络和转录组特征

Charles P Burton, Evgeny J Chumin, Alyssa Y Collins, Ravi S Pandey, Scott A Persohn, Sara K Quinney, Ravi S Pandey, Kristen D Onos, Paul R Territo
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引用次数: 0

摘要

亚临界癫痫样活动与认知功能受损相关,常见于阿尔茨海默病(AD)患者。抗惊厥药左乙拉西坦(LEV)目前正在临床试验中评估其降低AD患者癫痫样活动和改善认知功能的能力。当前研究的目的是应用药代动力学(PK)、医学成像网络分析、基因转录组学和PK/PD建模对淀粉样变性小鼠队列进行研究,以确定LEV如何在剂量依赖的基础上恢复或驱动小鼠脑网络的改变,并使用MODEL-AD临床前测试核心的严格临床前流水线。方法:根据PK模型的异速比例临床剂量水平,对两性5XFAD小鼠给予慢性LEV 3个月。数据收集和分析包括多模式方法,利用18F-FDG PET/MRI成像和分析,转录组学分析和PK/PD建模。结果:LEV的药代动力学在Cmax、CL/F和AUC(0-inf)中显示出性别和剂量依赖性,并使用模拟来估计剂量方案。慢性剂量为10、30和56 mg/kg,在脑摄取和全脑协方差测量(如聚类系数、程度、网络密度和连接强度)中显示出18F-FDG的特定区域差异。此外,通过nanoString进行的转录组学分析显示,在与18F-FDG摄取和网络变化一致的途径中,基因表达的变化是剂量依赖性的,PK/PD模型显示关键基因的浓度依赖性,但网络协方差模型没有。讨论:该研究首次详细报道了5XFAD小鼠中LEV引起的代谢协方差和转录组网络变化之间的关系。总体而言,我们的研究结果强调了基于剂量和性别的非线性动力学,其中基因表达分析显示LEV的剂量和浓度依赖性变化,以及与人类AD相关的脑代谢和/或脑稳态机制,这与18F-FDG图像的网络方差分析密切相关。总的来说,本研究展示了多模态连接组、转录组和药代动力学方法在进一步研究临床前研究中的剂量依赖关系方面的价值,并具有为临床研究设计提供信息的转化价值。
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Levetiracetam Modulates Brain Metabolic Networks and Transcriptomic Signatures in the 5XFAD Mouse Model of Alzheimer's disease.
INTRODUCTION: Subcritical epileptiform activity is associated with impaired cognitive function and is commonly seen in patients with Alzheimer's disease (AD). The anti-convulsant, levetiracetam (LEV), is currently being evaluated in clinical trials for its ability to reduce epileptiform activity and improve cognitive function in AD. The purpose of the current study was to apply pharmacokinetics (PK), network analysis of medical imaging, gene transcriptomics, and PK/PD modeling to a cohort of amyloidogenic mice to establish how LEV restores or drives alterations in the brain networks of mice in a dose-dependent basis using the rigorous preclinical pipeline of the MODEL-AD Preclinical Testing Core. METHODS: Chronic LEV was administered to 5XFAD mice of both sexes for 3 months based on allometrically scaled clinical dose levels from PK models. Data collection and analysis consisted of a multi-modal approach utilizing 18F-FDG PET/MRI imaging and analysis, transcriptomic analyses, and PK/PD modeling. RESULTS: Pharmacokinetics of LEV showed a sex and dose dependence in Cmax, CL/F, and AUC(0-inf);, with simulations used to estimate dose regimens. Chronic dosing at 10, 30, and 56 mg/kg, showed 18F-FDG specific regional differences in brain uptake, and in whole brain covariance measures such as clustering coefficient, degree, network density, and connection strength (i.e. positive and negative). In addition, transcriptomic analysis via nanoString showed dose-dependent changes in gene expression in pathways consistent 18F-FDG uptake and network changes, and PK/PD modeling showed a concentration dependence for key genes, but not for network covariance modeling. DISCUSSION: This study represents the first report detailing the relationships of metabolic covariance and transcriptomic network changes resulting from LEV administration in 5XFAD mice. Overall, our results highlight non-linear kinetics based on dose and sex, where gene expression analysis demonstrated LEV dose- and concentration- dependent changes, along with cerebral metabolism, and/or cerebral homeostatic mechanisms relevant to human AD, which aligned closely with network covariance analysis of 18F-FDG images. Collectively, this study show cases the value of a multimodal connectomic, transcriptomic, and pharmacokinetic approach to further investigate dose dependent relationships in preclinical studies, with translational value towards informing clinical study design.
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