Young Karen, Benny Merline, Schmidt Augusto, Wu Shu
Division of Neonatology, Department of Pediatrics, Batchelor Children Research Institute, University of Miami School of Medicine, Miami, FL 33136, USA.
Cells. 2024 Dec 18;13(24):2094. doi: 10.3390/cells13242094.
Extremely premature infants are at significant risk for developing bronchopulmonary dysplasia (BPD) and neurodevelopmental impairment (NDI). Although BPD is a predictor of poor neurodevelopmental outcomes, it is currently unknown how BPD contributes to brain injury and long-term NDI in pre-term infants. Extracellular vesicles (EVs) are small, membrane-bound structures released from cells into the surrounding environment. EVs are involved in inter-organ communication in diverse pathological processes. Inflammasomes are large, multiprotein complexes that are part of the innate immune system and are responsible for triggering inflammatory responses and cell death. Apoptosis-associated speck-like protein containing a caspase recruitment domain (ASC) is pivotal in inflammasome assembly and activating inflammatory caspase-1. Activated caspase-1 cleaves gasdermin D (GSDMD) to release a 30 kD N-terminal domain that can form membrane pores, leading to lytic cell death, also known as pyroptosis. Activated caspase-1 can also cleave pro-IL-1β and pro-IL-18 to their active forms, which can be rapidly released through the GSDMD pores to induce inflammation. Recent evidence has emerged that activation of inflammasomes is associated with neonatal lung and brain injury, and inhibition of inflammasomes reduces hyperoxia-induced neonatal lung and brain injury. Additionally, multiple studies have demonstrated that hyperoxia stimulates the release of lung-derived EVs that contain inflammasome cargos. Adoptive transfer of these EVs into the circulation of normal neonatal mice and rats induces brain inflammatory injury. This review focuses on EV-inflammasomes' roles in mediating lung-to-brain crosstalk via EV-dependent and EV-independent mechanisms critical in BPD, brain injury, and NDI pathogenesis. EV-inflammasomes will be discussed as potential therapeutic targets for neonatal lung and brain injury.
极早产儿发生支气管肺发育不良(BPD)和神经发育障碍(NDI)的风险很高。虽然BPD是神经发育不良预后的一个预测指标,但目前尚不清楚BPD如何导致早产儿脑损伤和长期NDI。细胞外囊泡(EVs)是从细胞释放到周围环境中的小的膜结合结构。EVs参与多种病理过程中的器官间通讯。炎性小体是大型多蛋白复合物,是先天免疫系统的一部分,负责触发炎症反应和细胞死亡。含半胱天冬酶募集结构域的凋亡相关斑点样蛋白(ASC)在炎性小体组装和激活炎性半胱天冬酶-1中起关键作用。活化的半胱天冬酶-1切割gasdermin D(GSDMD)以释放一个30kD的N端结构域,该结构域可形成膜孔,导致溶解性细胞死亡,也称为细胞焦亡。活化的半胱天冬酶-1还可将前白细胞介素-1β和前白细胞介素-18切割成其活性形式,这些活性形式可通过GSDMD孔快速释放以诱导炎症。最近有证据表明,炎性小体的激活与新生儿肺和脑损伤有关, 抑制炎性小体可减少高氧诱导的新生儿肺和脑损伤。此外,多项研究表明,高氧刺激含有炎性小体货物的肺源性EVs的释放。将这些EVs过继转移到正常新生小鼠和大鼠的循环中会诱导脑炎性损伤。本综述重点关注EV-炎性小体在通过对BPD、脑损伤和NDI发病机制至关重要的EV依赖性和非依赖性机制介导肺-脑串扰中的作用。EV-炎性小体将作为新生儿肺和脑损伤的潜在治疗靶点进行讨论。