University of Queensland researchers have found a way to reverse a cellular process triggered by COVID-19 that contributes to premature ageing of the brain.

Dr Julio Aguado and a team from UQโ€™s Australian Institute for Bioengineering and Nanotechnology used synthetic brain organoid models, grown in a laboratory from human stem cells, to study the effect of different SARS-COV-2 variants on brain tissue.


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โ€œWe found COVID-19 accelerates the presence of โ€˜zombieโ€™ or senescent cells, which accumulate naturally and gradually in the brain as we get older,โ€ Dr Aguado said.

โ€œSenescent cells are known to drive tissue inflammation and degeneration, leaving patients exposed to cognitive impairments like brain fog and memory loss.โ€


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Dr Aguado said confirmation that COVID-19 was a catalyst for this premature ageing prompted an attempt to reset the biological brain clock.

โ€œWe used the brain organoids to screen a range of therapeutics, looking for any capable of removing those senescent cells,โ€ he said.

The researchers found four drugs that selectively eliminated the cells caused by COVID-19 โ€“ navitoclax, ABT-737, fisetin, and a cocktail of dasatinib plus quercetin (D+Q)

Dr Aguado said the drugs rejuvenated the brain and decreased the chance of neurodegenerative symptoms in the organoids, as well as in a mouse model infected with COVID-19.

โ€œMore research is needed to fully understand the mechanisms at play, but this study marks a significant step forward in our knowledge of the intricate relationship between viral infections, ageing and neurological well-being,โ€ he said.

โ€œLong term, we can expect widespread use of these drugs to treat persistent post-acute infection syndromes caused by viral infections like COVID-19.โ€

AIBN organoid expert Professor Ernst Wolvetang said human stem cell-derived brain organoids allow researchers to carry out experiments that would be ethically and practically difficult in human subjects.

โ€œOur study beautifully demonstrates how human brain models can accelerate the pre-clinical screening of therapeutics โ€“ while also moving towards animal-free testing – with potentially global impacts,โ€ Professor Wolvetang said.

โ€œThis same method of drug screening could also help Alzheimerโ€™s research and a whole host of neurodegenerative diseases where senescence is a driver.โ€

IMAGE CREDIT: AIBN


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