Persistent neuroinflammation and functional deficits in a murine model of decompression sickness.
Abid R BhatAwadhesh K AryaVeena M BhopaleZuha ImtiyazSu XuDilara BedirStephen R ThomPublished in: Journal of applied physiology (Bethesda, Md. : 1985) (2024)
We hypothesized that early intra-central nervous system (CNS) responses in a murine model of decompression sickness (DCS) would be reflected by changes in the microparticles (MPs) that exit the brain via the glymphatic system, and due to systemic responses the MPs would cause inflammatory changes lasting for many days leading to functional neurological deficits. Elevations on the order of threefold of blood-borne inflammatory MPs, neutrophil activation, glymphatic flow, and neuroinflammation in cerebral cortex and hippocampus were found in mice at 12 days after exposure to 760 kPa of air for 2 h. Mice also exhibited a significant decline in memory and locomotor activity, as assessed by novel object recognition and rotarod testing. Similar inflammatory changes in blood, neuroinflammation, and functional impairments were initiated in naïve mice by injection of filamentous (F-) actin-positive MPs, but not F-actin-negative MPs, obtained from decompressed mice. We conclude that high pressure/decompression stress establishes a systemic inflammatory process that results in prolonged neuroinflammation and functional impairments in the mouse decompression model. NEW & NOTEWORTHY Elevated glymphatic flow due to astrocyte and microglial activation from high-pressure exposure triggers release of microparticles (MPs) to the circulation where neutrophil activation and production of filamentous (F)-actin expressing MPs result in a persistent feed-forward neuroinflammatory cycle and functional deficits lasting for at least 12 days.
Keyphrases
- traumatic brain injury
- cerebral ischemia
- lipopolysaccharide induced
- lps induced
- minimally invasive
- oxidative stress
- high fat diet induced
- cognitive impairment
- inflammatory response
- spinal cord injury
- working memory
- metabolic syndrome
- type diabetes
- cell migration
- spinal cord
- white matter
- brain injury
- insulin resistance
- functional connectivity
- heat stress
- drug induced
- stress induced