Abstract

Abstract Cardiotoxicity is the second leading cause of death among cancer survivors and can manifest as arrhythmia, acute coronary syndrome, acute heart failure, or pericarditis/myocarditis. Chronic myocyte damage and apoptosis can transition from an asymptomatic phase to adaptive myocardial hypertrophy, followed by decreased left ventricular ejection fraction, and eventual heart failure. Cardio-oncology is an emerging field that studies cancer therapy-associated cardiotoxicities. The development of reliable and effective preclinical models for cardiotoxicity prediction and prevention is essential to improving the long-term cardiac health of cancer patients. Zebrafish are a promising animal model for the field of cardio-oncology and have emerged as an invaluable tool for investigating genetic and molecular aspects of cardiovascular research. Zebrafish heart cells are like human heart cells at the molecular level, making them an ideal system for studying the genetic underpinning of cardiac function. Zebrafish myl7 gene, a myosin light chain-7 gene, is a regulatory gene of heart orthologs to human MYL7. In-vivo imaging is limited due to the opacification of skin and subdermal structures. To conduct in-vivo whole organism imaging studies, skin transparency is a primary requirement, necessitating the blocking of pigmentation. The Zebrafish Casper mutant maintains skin transparency throughout its life, offering the ideal combination of sensitivity and resolution for in-vivo analyses and imaging. In this study, we have developed a novel transparent transgenic zebrafish model and established time-lapse in-vivo confocal microscopy to study cellular phenotype/pathologies of cardiomyocytes. The newly developed homozygous transparent transgenic Casper/myl7:RFP; annexin-5:YFP/NF-kB: GFP/mpeg1:mcherryFP, allows us to study cell death process (Annexin5) and inflammatory activity (NF-kB) in microglia and cardiomyocytes. We have successfully established in vivo fluorescence and confocal microscopy in this newly developed strain, enabling the study of cellular morphology and function changes under various conditions. This will allow us to elucidate cell death patterns, and cardio-inflammatory and cardiotoxicity pathways. Citation Format: Surendra K. Rajpurohit, Taitum Gossman, Sai Nasanally, Keshu Bhatt, Aiden Van Derhei, Simran Hotwani, Devan-Anmol Manhiani, Rohan Pasi, Jiaqi Mi, Vishal Arora, Balakrishna Lokeshwar. Development of transparent transgenic zebrafish model to study anti-cancer drug induced in vivo cardiotoxicity [abstract]. In: Proceedings of the American Association for Cancer Research Annual Meeting 2024; Part 1 (Regular Abstracts); 2024 Apr 5-10; San Diego, CA. Philadelphia (PA): AACR; Cancer Res 2024;84(6_Suppl):Abstract nr 1430.

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