Department of Medicine, University of Geneva, 1211 Geneva, Switzerland.
School of Pharmaceutical Sciences, University of Geneva, 1211 Geneva, Switzerland.
Cells. 2022 Dec 4;11(23):3926. doi: 10.3390/cells11233926.
Morphine, a commonly used antinociceptive drug in hospitals, is known to cross the blood-brain barrier (BBB) by first passing through brain endothelial cells. Despite its pain-relieving effect, morphine also has detrimental effects, such as the potential induction of redox imbalance in the brain. However, there is still insufficient evidence of these effects on the brain, particularly on the brain endothelial cells and the extracellular vesicles that they naturally release. Indeed, extracellular vesicles (EVs) are nanosized bioparticles produced by almost all cell types and are currently thought to reflect the physiological state of their parent cells. These vesicles have emerged as a promising source of biomarkers by indicating the functional or dysfunctional state of their parent cells and, thus, allowing a better understanding of the biological processes involved in an adverse state. However, there is very little information on the morphine effect on human brain microvascular endothelial cells (HBMECs), and even less on their released EVs. Therefore, the current study aimed at unraveling the detrimental mechanisms of morphine exposure (at 1, 10, 25, 50 and 100 µM) for 24 h on human brain microvascular endothelial cells as well as on their associated EVs. Isolation of EVs was carried out using an affinity-based method. Several orthogonal techniques (NTA, western blotting and proteomics analysis) were used to validate the EVs enrichment, quality and concentration. Data-independent mass spectrometry (DIA-MS)-based proteomics was applied in order to analyze the proteome modulations induced by morphine on HBMECs and EVs. We were able to quantify almost 5500 proteins in HBMECs and 1500 proteins in EVs, of which 256 and 148, respectively, were found to be differentially expressed in at least one condition. Pathway enrichment analysis revealed that the "cell adhesion and extracellular matrix remodeling" process and the "HIF1 pathway", a pathway related to oxidative stress responses, were significantly modulated upon morphine exposure in HBMECs and EVs. Altogether, the combination of proteomics and bioinformatics findings highlighted shared pathways between HBMECs exposed to morphine and their released EVs. These results put forward molecular signatures of morphine-induced toxicity in HBMECs that were also carried by EVs. Therefore, EVs could potentially be regarded as a useful tool to investigate brain endothelial cells dysfunction, and to a different extent, the BBB dysfunction in patient circulation using these "signature pathways".
吗啡是医院中常用的一种抗伤害性药物,已知其通过首先穿过脑内皮细胞来穿过血脑屏障(BBB)。尽管吗啡具有止痛作用,但它也有不利影响,例如在大脑中潜在地诱导氧化还原失衡。然而,关于这些影响在大脑中的作用,特别是在脑内皮细胞及其自然释放的细胞外囊泡(EVs)方面,仍缺乏足够的证据。事实上,细胞外囊泡(EVs)是几乎所有细胞类型产生的纳米级生物颗粒,目前被认为反映了其亲代细胞的生理状态。这些囊泡已成为生物标志物的有前途的来源,表明其亲代细胞的功能或功能障碍状态,从而更好地理解涉及不利状态的生物学过程。然而,关于吗啡对人脑微血管内皮细胞(HBMEC)的作用,甚至更少的是关于其释放的 EVs,几乎没有信息。因此,目前的研究旨在揭示吗啡暴露(1、10、25、50 和 100 μM)24 小时对人脑微血管内皮细胞及其相关 EVs 的有害机制。使用基于亲和力的方法分离 EVs。使用几种正交技术(NTA、western blot 和蛋白质组学分析)来验证 EVs 的富集、质量和浓度。应用无依赖于质量标签的质谱(DIA-MS)-基于蛋白质组学来分析吗啡对 HBMECs 和 EVs 诱导的蛋白质组学调节。我们能够在 HBMECs 中定量近 5500 种蛋白质,在 EVs 中定量 1500 种蛋白质,其中分别有 256 种和 148 种蛋白质在至少一种条件下被发现差异表达。途径富集分析表明,在 HBMECs 和 EVs 中,"细胞黏附和细胞外基质重塑"过程和"缺氧诱导因子 1 途径"(与氧化应激反应相关的途径)显著调节。总的来说,蛋白质组学和生物信息学研究结果强调了暴露于吗啡的 HBMECs 及其释放的 EVs 之间的共享途径。这些结果提出了在 HBMECs 中吗啡诱导的毒性的分子特征,这些特征也由 EVs 携带。因此,EVs 可以潜在地被视为一种有用的工具,用于使用这些"特征途径"来研究脑内皮细胞功能障碍,并且在不同程度上研究患者循环中的血脑屏障功能障碍。