
Understanding Primary Blast Injury: High Frequency Pressure Acutely Disrupts Neuronal Network Dynamics in Cerebral Organoids
Author(s) -
Marc Joshua Silvosa,
Nohemi Romo Mercado,
Nikolas Merlock,
Suhas Vidhate,
Ricardo Mejía-Álvarez,
Tony T. Yuan,
Adam M. Willis,
Zane R. Lybrand
Publication year - 2022
Publication title -
journal of neurotrauma
Language(s) - English
Resource type - Journals
SCImago Journal Rank - 1.653
H-Index - 149
eISSN - 1557-9042
pISSN - 0897-7151
DOI - 10.1089/neu.2022.0044
Subject(s) - organoid , neuroscience , traumatic brain injury , dynamics (music) , medicine , biology , psychology , psychiatry , pedagogy
Blast exposure represents a common occupational risk capable of generating mild to severe traumatic brain injuries (TBI). During blast exposure, a pressure shockwave passes through the skull and exposes brain tissue to complex pressure waveforms. The primary neurophysiological response to blast-induced pressure waveforms remains poorly understood. Here, we use a computer-controlled table-top pressure chamber to expose human stem cell-derived cerebral organoids to varied frequency of pressure waves and characterize the neurophysiological response. Pressure waves that reach a maximum amplitude of 250 kPa were used to model a less severe TBI and 350 kPa for a more severe blast TBI event. With each amplitude, a frequency range of 500 Hz, 3000 Hz, and 5000 Hz was tested. Following the 250 kPa overpressure a multi-electrode array recorded organoid neural activity. We observed an acute suppression neuronal activity in single unit events, population events, and network oscillations that recovered within 24 h. Additionally, we observed a network desynchronization after exposure higher frequency waveforms. Conversely, organoids exposed to higher amplitude pressure (350k Pa) displayed drastic neurophysiological differences that failed to recover within 24 h. Further, lower amplitude "blast" (250 kPa) did not induce cellular damage whereas the higher amplitude "blast" (350 kPa) generated greater apoptosis throughout each organoid. Our data indicate that specific features of pressure waves found intracranially during blast TBI have varied effects on neurophysiological activity that can occur even without cellular damage.