Division of Neonatology and Batchelor Children's Research Institute, Department of Pediatrics, University of Miami Miller School of Medicine, P. O. Box 016960, Miami, FL, 33101, USA.
Department of Neurological Surgery, Miami Project to Cure Paralysis, University of Miami Miller School of Medicine, Miami, USA.
Sci Rep. 2021 Apr 22;11(1):8791. doi: 10.1038/s41598-021-87706-w.
Hyperoxia-induced lung injury plays a key role in the development of bronchopulmonary dysplasia (BPD), characterized by inflammatory injury and impaired lung development in preterm infants. Although BPD is a predictor of poor neurodevelopmental outcomes, currently it is uncertain how lung injury contributes to brain injury in preterm infants. Extracellular vesicles (EVs) are a heterogeneous group of cell-derived membranous structures that regulate intercellular and inter-organ communications. Gasdermin D (GSDMD) has emerged as a key executor of inflammasome-mediated cell death and inflammation. In this study, we utilized a neonatal rat model of BPD to assess if hyperoxia stimulates lung release of circulating EVs and if these EVs induce lung and brain injury. We found that hyperoxia-exposed rats had elevated numbers of plasma-derived EVs compared to rats maintained in room air. These EVs also had increased cargos of surfactant protein C, a marker of type II alveolar epithelial cells (AEC), and the active (p30) form of GSDMD. When these EVs were adoptively transferred into normal newborn rats via intravenous injection, they were taken up both by lung and brain tissues. Moreover, EVs from hyperoxic animals induced not only the pathological hallmarks of BPD, but also brain inflammatory injury in recipient rats, as well as inducing cell death in cultured pulmonary vascular endothelial cells and neural stem cells (NSC). Similarly, hyperoxia-exposed cultured AEC-like cells released EVs that also contained increased GSDMD-p30 and these EVs induced pyroptotic cell death in NSC. Overall, these data indicate that hyperoxia-activated circulating EVs mediate a lung to brain crosstalk resulting in brain injury and suggest a mechanism that links lung injury and neurodevelopmental impairment in BPD infants.
高氧诱导性肺损伤在支气管肺发育不良(BPD)的发生发展中起着关键作用,其特征是早产儿肺部炎症损伤和发育不良。尽管 BPD 是预测早产儿神经发育不良结局的指标,但目前尚不清楚肺损伤如何导致早产儿脑损伤。细胞外囊泡(EVs)是一组异质性的细胞来源的膜结构,调节细胞间和器官间的通讯。Gasdermin D(GSDMD)已成为炎症小体介导的细胞死亡和炎症的关键执行者。在这项研究中,我们利用 BPD 新生大鼠模型来评估高氧是否刺激肺释放循环 EVs,以及这些 EVs 是否会引起肺和脑损伤。我们发现,与在常氧环境中维持的大鼠相比,高氧暴露的大鼠血浆衍生的 EVs 数量增加。这些 EVs 还增加了表面活性蛋白 C 的载体,表面活性蛋白 C 是 II 型肺泡上皮细胞(AEC)的标志物,以及 GSDMD 的活性(p30)形式。当这些 EVs 通过静脉注射被被动转移到正常新生大鼠体内时,它们被肺和脑组织摄取。此外,来自高氧动物的 EVs 不仅诱导了受者大鼠的 BPD 病理特征,还诱导了脑炎性损伤,并诱导培养的肺血管内皮细胞和神经干细胞(NSC)发生细胞死亡。同样,高氧暴露的培养 AEC 样细胞释放的 EVs 也含有增加的 GSDMD-p30,这些 EVs 诱导 NSC 发生细胞焦亡。总之,这些数据表明,高氧激活的循环 EVs 介导了肺到脑的串扰,导致脑损伤,并提示了一种将肺损伤与 BPD 婴儿神经发育障碍联系起来的机制。