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Neuroinflammatory and Neurometabolomic Consequences from Inhaled Wildfire Smoke-Derived Particulate Matter in the Western United States

  • David Scieszka
  • , Russell Hunter
  • , Jessica Begay
  • , Marsha Bitsui
  • , Yan Lin
  • , Joseph Galewsky
  • , Masako Morishita
  • , Zachary Klaver
  • , James Wagner
  • , Jack R. Harkema
  • , Guy Herbert
  • , Selita Lucas
  • , Charlotte McVeigh
  • , Alicia Bolt
  • , Barry Bleske
  • , Christopher G. Canal
  • , Ekaterina Mostovenko
  • , Andrew K. Ottens
  • , Haiwei Gu
  • , Matthew J. Campen
  • Shahani Noor

Research output: Contribution to journalArticlepeer-review

Abstract

Utilizing a mobile laboratory located >300 km away from wildfire smoke (WFS) sources, this study examined the systemic immune response profile, with a focus on neuroinflammatory and neurometabolomic consequences, resulting from inhalation exposure to naturally occurring wildfires in California, Arizona, and Washington in 2020. After a 20-day (4 h/day) exposure period in a mobile laboratory stationed in New Mexico, WFS-derived particulate matter (WFPM) inhalation resulted in significant neuroinflammation while immune activity in the peripheral (lung, bone marrow) appeared to be resolved in C57BL/6 mice. Importantly, WFPM exposure increased cerebrovascular endothelial cell activation and expression of adhesion molecules (VCAM-1 and ICAM-1) in addition to increased glial activation and peripheral immune cell infiltration into the brain. Flow cytometry analysis revealed proinflammatory phenotypes of microglia and peripheral immune subsets in the brain of WFPM-exposed mice. Interestingly, endothelial cell neuroimmune activity was differentially associated with levels of PECAM-1 expression, suggesting that subsets of cerebrovascular endothelial cells were transitioning to resolution of inflammation following the 20-day exposure. Neurometabolites related to protection against aging, such as NAD+ and taurine, were decreased by WFPM exposure. Additionally, increased pathological amyloid-beta protein accumulation, a hallmark of neurodegeneration, was observed. Neuroinflammation, together with decreased levels of key neurometabolites, reflect a cluster of outcomes with important implications in priming inflammaging and aging-related neurodegenerative phenotypes.

Original languageEnglish (US)
Pages (from-to)149-162
Number of pages14
JournalToxicological Sciences
Volume186
Issue number1
DOIs
StatePublished - Mar 1 2022

All Science Journal Classification (ASJC) codes

  • Toxicology

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