4.8 Article

Surgical Trauma in Mice Modifies the Content of Circulating Extracellular Vesicles

期刊

FRONTIERS IN IMMUNOLOGY
卷 12, 期 -, 页码 -

出版社

FRONTIERS MEDIA SA
DOI: 10.3389/fimmu.2021.824696

关键词

circulating extracellular vesicles; surgery; proteomics; miRNA; alpha-synuclein

资金

  1. Swedish Medical Research Council
  2. Swedish Brain Foundation
  3. [INST 247/870-1 FUGG]

向作者/读者索取更多资源

Surgical interventions can trigger a cascade of molecular, cellular, and neural signaling responses that affect remote organs, including the brain. In this study, the researchers explored extracellular vesicles (EVs) as potential mediators and found significant differential expression of proteins and miRNAs in circulating EVs after surgery. They suggest that these EVs may modify the extracellular matrix of recipient cells and regulate metabolic processes, potentially mediating the remote effects of surgery on the brain.
Surgical interventions rapidly trigger a cascade of molecular, cellular, and neural signaling responses that ultimately reach remote organs, including the brain. Using a mouse model of orthopedic surgery, we have previously demonstrated hippocampal metabolic, structural, and functional changes associated with cognitive impairment. However, the nature of the underlying signals responsible for such periphery-to-brain communication remains hitherto elusive. Here we present the first exploratory study that tests the hypothesis of extracellular vesicles (EVs) as potential mediators carrying information from the injured tissue to the distal organs including the brain. The primary goal was to investigate whether the cargo of circulating EVs after surgery can undergo quantitative changes that could potentially trigger phenotypic modifications in the target tissues. EVs were isolated from the serum of the mice subjected to a tibia surgery after 6, 24, and 72 h, and the proteome and miRNAome were investigated using mass spectrometry and RNA-seq approaches. We found substantial differential expression of proteins and miRNAs starting at 6 h post-surgery and peaking at 24 h. Interestingly, one of the up-regulated proteins at 24 h was alpha-synuclein, a pathogenic hallmark of certain neurodegenerative syndromes. Analysis of miRNA target mRNA and corresponding biological pathways indicate the potential of post-surgery EVs to modify the extracellular matrix of the recipient cells and regulate metabolic processes including fatty acid metabolism. We conclude that surgery alters the cargo of circulating EVs in the blood, and our results suggest EVs as potential systemic signal carriers mediating remote effects of surgery on the brain.

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