Department of Emergency Medicine, University of Maryland School of Medicine, Baltimore, Maryland, United States.
Department of Diagnostic Radiology and Nuclear Medicine, University of Maryland School of Medicine, Baltimore, Maryland, United States.
J Neurophysiol. 2023 Mar 1;129(3):662-671. doi: 10.1152/jn.00005.2023. Epub 2023 Feb 8.
This project investigated glial-based lymphatic (glymphatic) function and its role in a murine model of decompression sickness (DCS). DCS pathophysiology is traditionally viewed as being related to gas bubble formation from insoluble gas on decompression. However, a body of work implicates a role for a subset of inflammatory extracellular vesicles, 0.1 to 1 µm microparticles (MPs) that are elevated in human and rodent models in response to high gas pressure and rise further after decompression. Herein, we describe immunohistochemical and Western blot evidence showing that following high air pressure exposure, there are elevations of astrocyte NF-κB and microglial-ionized calcium-binding adaptor protein-1 (IBA-1) along with fluorescence contrast and MRI findings of an increase in glymphatic flow. Concomitant elevations of central nervous system-derived MPs coexpressing thrombospondin-1 (TSP) drain to deep cervical nodes and then to blood where they cause neutrophil activation. A new set of blood-borne MPs are generated that express filamentous actin at the surface that exacerbate neutrophil activation. Blood-brain barrier integrity is disrupted due to activated neutrophil sequestration that causes further astrocyte and microglial perturbation. When postdecompression node or blood MPs are injected into naïve mice, the same spectrum of abnormalities occur and they are blocked with coadministration of antibody to TSP. We conclude that high pressure/decompression causes neuroinflammation with an increased glymphatic flow. The resulting systemic liberation of TSP-expressing MPs sustains the neuroinflammatory cycle lasting for days. A murine model of central nervous system (CNS) decompression sickness demonstrates that high gas pressure activates astrocytes and microglia triggering inflammatory microparticle (MP) production. Thrombospondin-expressing MPs are released from the CNS via enhanced glymphatic flow to the systemic circulation where they activate neutrophils. Secondary production of neutrophil-derived MPs causes further cell activation and neutrophil adherence to the brain microvasculature establishing a feed-forward neuroinflammatory cycle.
本项目研究了神经胶质淋巴(glymphatic)功能及其在减压病(DCS)小鼠模型中的作用。减压病的病理生理学传统上被认为与减压时不溶性气体形成气体泡有关。然而,大量工作表明,一组炎症性细胞外囊泡(0.1 至 1 µm 微粒(MPs))的子集在人类和啮齿动物模型中对高气压有作用,并在减压后进一步升高。在此,我们描述了免疫组织化学和 Western blot 证据,表明在高气压暴露后,星形胶质细胞 NF-κB 和小胶质细胞离子钙结合衔接蛋白-1(IBA-1)升高,以及荧光对比和 MRI 发现糖质流增加。同时,中枢神经系统来源的 MPs 表达血小板反应蛋白-1(TSP)升高,引流至深部颈淋巴结,然后进入血液,在血液中它们引起中性粒细胞活化。一组新的血源性 MPs 生成,表面表达丝状肌动蛋白,加剧中性粒细胞活化。由于被激活的中性粒细胞被隔离,破坏了血脑屏障的完整性,导致星形胶质细胞和小胶质细胞进一步紊乱。当将 postdecompression 节点或血液 MPs 注射到未处理的小鼠中时,会出现相同的异常谱,并且用 TSP 抗体共给药可阻断它们。我们得出结论,高压/减压会导致神经炎症,糖质流增加。由此产生的 TSP 表达 MPs 的系统性释放维持了持续数天的神经炎症循环。中枢神经系统(CNS)减压病的小鼠模型表明,高气压激活星形胶质细胞和小胶质细胞,触发炎症性微粒(MP)产生。TSP 表达的 MPs 通过增强的糖质流从 CNS 释放到全身循环,在那里它们激活中性粒细胞。中性粒细胞衍生的 MPs 的二次产生导致进一步的细胞激活和中性粒细胞黏附到脑微血管,建立了一个正反馈神经炎症循环。