1 Department of Pathology & Anatomical Sciences, University of Missouri School of Medicine, Columbia, Missouri.
7 Truman VA Hospital Research Service, Columbia, Missouri.
J Neurotrauma. 2019 Jul 1;36(13):2117-2128. doi: 10.1089/neu.2018.6260. Epub 2019 Mar 13.
Service members during military actions or combat training are exposed frequently to primary blast generated by explosive weaponry. The majority of military-related neurotrauma are classified as mild and designated as "invisible injuries" that are prevalent during current conflicts. While the previous experimental blast injury studies using moderate- to high-intensity exposures focused mainly on gross and microscopic neuropathology, our previous studies have shown that low-intensity blast (LIB) exposures resulted in nanoscale subcellular myelin and mitochondrial damages and subsequent behavioral disorders in the absence of gross or detectable cellular damage. In this study, we used transmission electron microscopy to delineate the LIB effects at the ultrastructural level specifically focusing on the neuron perikaryon, axons, and synapses in the cortex and hippocampus of mice at seven and 30 days post-injury (DPI). We found dysmorphic dark neuronal perikaryon and "cytoplasmic aeration" of dendritic processes, as well as increased microtubular fragmentation of the myelinated axons along with biochemically measured elevated tau/phosphorylated tau/Aβ levels. The number of cortical excitatory synapses decreased along with a compensatory increase of the post-synaptic density (PSD) thickness both at seven and 30 DPI, while the amount of hippocampal CA1 synapses increased with the reduced PSD thickness. In addition, we observed a significant increase in protein levels of PSD95 and synaptophysin mainly at seven DPI indicating potential synaptic reorganization. These results demonstrated that a single LIB exposure can lead to ultrastructural brain injury with accompanying multi-focal neuronal organelle alterations. This pre-clinical study provides key insights into disease pathogenesis related to primary blast exposure.
在军事行动或战斗训练中,军人经常会受到爆炸武器产生的原发性爆炸的影响。大多数与军事相关的神经创伤都被归类为轻度创伤,被称为“隐形伤”,在当前的冲突中较为常见。虽然之前使用中高强度暴露的实验性爆炸伤研究主要集中在大体和显微镜神经病理学上,但我们之前的研究表明,低强度爆炸(LIB)暴露会导致纳米级的少突胶质细胞髓鞘和线粒体损伤,并在没有明显或可检测到的细胞损伤的情况下随后出现行为障碍。在这项研究中,我们使用透射电子显微镜在超微结构水平上描绘 LIB 效应,特别关注皮质和海马体中神经元胞体、轴突和突触。我们发现,神经元胞体形态异常,树突状突起的“细胞质充气”,以及髓鞘轴突的微管片段增多,同时生物化学测量显示 tau/磷酸化 tau/Aβ 水平升高。皮质兴奋性突触数量减少,同时突触后密度(PSD)厚度代偿性增加,这两种情况在 7 和 30 天损伤后(DPI)都存在;而海马 CA1 突触数量增加,PSD 厚度减少。此外,我们观察到 PSD95 和突触小体蛋白的蛋白水平显著增加,主要在 7 DPI 时增加,表明存在潜在的突触重组。这些结果表明,单次 LIB 暴露可导致伴有多灶性神经元细胞器改变的超微结构脑损伤。这项临床前研究为原发性爆炸暴露相关疾病发病机制提供了重要见解。