Murray Kathleen E, Ravula Arun Reddy, Stiritz Victoria A, Cominski Tara P, Delic Vedad, Marín de Evsikova Caralina, Rama Rao Kakulavarapu V, Chandra Namas, Beck Kevin D, Pfister Bryan J, Citron Bruce A
Laboratory of Molecular Biology, Research & Development, U.S. Department of Veterans Affairs, VA New Jersey Health Care System, East Orange, NJ, USA.
School of Graduate Studies, Rutgers Health, Newark, NJ, USA.
Mol Neurobiol. 2025 Aug;62(8):9980-10005. doi: 10.1007/s12035-025-04879-5. Epub 2025 Apr 3.
Blast-induced traumatic brain injury (bTBI) has been identified as an increasingly prevalent cause of morbidity and mortality in both military and civilian populations over the past few decades. Functional outcomes following bTBI vary widely among individuals, and chronic neurodegenerative effects including cognitive impairments can develop without effective diagnosis and treatment. Genetic predispositions and sex differences may affect gene expression changes in response to bTBI and influence an individual's probability of sustaining long-term damage or exhibiting resilience and tissue repair. Male and female mice from eight genetically diverse and distinct strains (129S1/SvImJ, A/J, C57BL/6J, CAST/EiJ, NOD/ShiLtJ, NZO/HlLtJ, PWK/PhJ, WSB/EiJ) which encompassed 90% of the genetic variability in commercially available laboratory mice were exposed to a single bTBI (180 kPa) using a well-established shock tube system. Subacute changes in hippocampal gene expression due to blast exposure were assessed using RNA-seq at 1-month post-injury. We identified patterns of dysregulation in gene ontology terms and canonical pathways related to mitochondrial function, ribosomal structure, synaptic plasticity, protein degradation, and intracellular signaling that varied by sex and/or strain, including significant changes in genes encoding respiratory complex I of the electron transport chain in male WSB/EiJ mice and the glutamatergic synapse across more than half of our groups. This study represents a multi-level examination of how genetic variability may influence response to bTBI and provides a foundation for the identification of potential therapeutic targets that could be modulated to improve the health of Veterans and others with histories of blast exposures.
在过去几十年中,爆炸所致创伤性脑损伤(bTBI)已被确认为军事和 civilian 人群中发病率和死亡率日益上升的原因。bTBI 后的功能结局在个体间差异很大,若没有有效的诊断和治疗,可能会出现包括认知障碍在内的慢性神经退行性影响。遗传易感性和性别差异可能会影响对 bTBI 的基因表达变化,并影响个体遭受长期损伤或表现出恢复力和组织修复的可能性。使用成熟的冲击管系统,将来自八种遗传多样且不同品系(129S1/SvImJ、A/J、C57BL/6J、CAST/EiJ、NOD/ShiLtJ、NZO/HlLtJ、PWK/PhJ、WSB/EiJ)的雄性和雌性小鼠暴露于单次 bTBI(180 kPa),这些品系涵盖了市售实验小鼠 90%的遗传变异性。在损伤后 1 个月,使用 RNA 测序评估爆炸暴露导致的海马基因表达的亚急性变化。我们确定了与线粒体功能、核糖体结构、突触可塑性、蛋白质降解和细胞内信号传导相关的基因本体术语和经典途径中的失调模式,这些模式因性别和/或品系而异,包括雄性 WSB/EiJ 小鼠中编码电子传递链呼吸复合体 I 的基因以及超过一半组中的谷氨酸能突触的显著变化。这项研究代表了对遗传变异性如何影响对 bTBI 的反应的多层次研究,并为确定潜在的治疗靶点提供了基础,这些靶点可以被调节以改善退伍军人和其他有爆炸暴露史者的健康状况。