Anemia is a common medical condition in preterm infants. Previous studies generated from this Program Project Grant (PPG) show that neurodevelopmental outcomes of preterm infants are dependent in part on the degree of anemia. In a developmentally appropriately-timed neonatal mouse model, phlebotomy induced anemia (PIA) of the degree commonly seen in hospitalized preterm infants results in significant short-term dysfunction and long-term injury to multiple brain areas including the hippocampus, prefrontal cortex, striatum and cerebellum. Potential therapies for PIA include erythropoietin (rHuEPO) administration and red blood cell transfusion (RBCTX). Each therapy has the potential advantage to relieve tissue hypoxia induced by anemia, but also expose the rapidly developing premature neonatal brain to potential neuropathologic processes. Treatment with rHuEPO may be neuroprotective or alternatively, shunt limited neonatal iron reserves into RBCs and thus restrict iron delivery, leading to worsening brain iron deficiency (ID). Animal models of neonatal anemia due to ID demonstrate particularly profound effects on the developing brain, including its genome, metabolome, structure, intracellular signaling pathways, electrophysiology and behavioral output. RBCTX, while alleviating tissue hypoxia due to anemia, places the brain at risk for iron overload, inflammation and suppression of endogenous EPO production ? a potential neuronal growth factor. The overall research aim of Project 3 is to evaluate whether rHuEPO treatment or RBCTX to relieve PIA in the newborn mouse pup between postnatal days (P) P3 and P13 improves regional brain development and function in the neonatal period and in young adulthood following resolution of anemia. This will be done by assessing the behavioral function, neurometabolome, and gene and protein expression in 4 brain regions in the neonatal and adult mouse that we have demonstrated in the previous 5 years are compromised by PIA.
Aim 1 tests whether treatment of PIA with rHuEPO beginning either prior to the onset of anemia or once anemia is present rescues the developing brain from the adverse effects of untreated PIA.
Aim 2 tests whether treatment of PIA with RBCTX initiated at the two hematocrit thresholds comparable to those utilized in Project 4 results improves neurodevelopmental outcome in the mouse. A multi-tiered developmental neuroscience approach that spans gene expression to behavior is necessary provide the needed mechanistic understanding for the anticipated results in the clinical studies proposed in Projects 1 and 4 of the PPG and to provide data to Core B to model effects of PIA and its treatments on neurodevelopment.
PROJECT 3: RELEVANCE Preterm infants are at high risk for developmental disability. Multiple factors during hospitalization influence the developmental outcomes of preterm infants, but few are controllable by the health care team. Optimal treatment of anemia appears to be one such controllable factor. The proposed research has large public health implications for the 300,000 neonates with anemia because it assesses the long-term effects of anemia and its treatment. The long-term effects are the true cost of neonatal anemia to society. Thus, knowledge of the effect of anemia and its treatments on the areas of the brain underlying the multiple behaviors at risk in preterm infants is particularly relevant in order to design optimal treatment strategies for neonatal anemia.
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