Literature DB >> 18323745

Altered gene expression patterns in dendritic cells after severe trauma: implications for systemic inflammation and organ injury.

Marcus Maier1, Sebastian Wutzler, Michael Bauer, Petar Trendafilov, Dirk Henrich, Ingo Marzi.   

Abstract

Dendritic cells (DCs) are professional antigen-presenting cells and members of the adoptive immunity. In addition, they play an important role in innate immunity within the systemic inflammatory response to trauma and sepsis. In this study, gene expression patterns of DC in patients with multiple trauma were studied. Total RNA was isolated from highly purified DCs (purity>95%) that were enriched from peripheral blood mononuclear cells and whole blood, respectively. Samples were obtained from 10 multiple trauma patients (injury severity score, 35.4+/-10.6 on day of admission) and 5 healthy volunteers (control). Aliquots of target cDNAs and reference samples (cDNA derived from the monocytic cell line SIGM5) were cohybridized on a thematic medium-density microarray assessing 780 inflammation-related transcripts. Twenty transcripts were up-regulated in DCs of multiple trauma patients compared with healthy volunteers, whereas these differences were missed when RNA from whole blood was subjected to transcriptomic profiling. This cluster included central effector molecules of DC such as transcripts encoding for 5-lipoxygenase and the corresponding leukotriene 4 receptor, which regulate DC migration, adoptive immune responses, and airway inflammation, as well as CD74, CXCL4, or platelet factor 4, a chemokine not implicated as a product of DCs to date. In addition, genes involved in antiapoptosis (BCL2), intracellular signal transduction (mitogen-activated protein kinase), and secretion of mediators (VAMP2) were found to be up-regulated. The up-regulated transcripts suggest that life span and signaling function of DCs are altered by trauma. Furthermore, these data confirm and expand the central role of chemokines and lipid mediators as effector molecules of DC-mediated immune responses in systemic inflammation associated with severe trauma.

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Year:  2008        PMID: 18323745     DOI: 10.1097/SHK.0b013e3181673eb4

Source DB:  PubMed          Journal:  Shock        ISSN: 1073-2322            Impact factor:   3.454


  12 in total

1.  Subsequent gene expression pattern in dendritic cells following multiple trauma.

Authors:  Emanuel V Geiger; Marcus Maier; Serin Schiessling; Sebastian Wutzler; Mark Lehnert; Ingo Marzi; Dirk Henrich
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2.  Claude H. Organ, Jr. memorial lecture: splanchnic hypoperfusion provokes acute lung injury via a 5-lipoxygenase-dependent mechanism.

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3.  Pathophysiological mechanisms in antiphospholipid syndrome.

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Journal:  Int J Clin Rheumtol       Date:  2011-04-01

4.  Platelet factor 4 is highly upregulated in dendritic cells after severe trauma.

Authors:  Marcus Maier; Emanuel V Geiger; Dirk Henrich; Carolyn Bendt; Sebastian Wutzler; Mark Lehnert; Ingo Marzi
Journal:  Mol Med       Date:  2009-08-27       Impact factor: 6.354

5.  Identification and interpretation of longitudinal gene expression changes in trauma.

Authors:  Natasa Rajicic; Joseph Cuschieri; Dianne M Finkelstein; Carol L Miller-Graziano; Douglas Hayden; Lyle L Moldawer; Ernest Moore; Grant O'Keefe; Kimberly Pelik; H Shaw Warren; David A Schoenfeld
Journal:  PLoS One       Date:  2010-12-20       Impact factor: 3.240

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Journal:  Crit Care       Date:  2016-11-28       Impact factor: 9.097

7.  Toll-Like Receptor 4 on both Myeloid Cells and Dendritic Cells Is Required for Systemic Inflammation and Organ Damage after Hemorrhagic Shock with Tissue Trauma in Mice.

Authors:  Kent Zettel; Sebastian Korff; Ruben Zamora; Adrian E Morelli; Sophie Darwiche; Patricia A Loughran; Greg Elson; Limin Shang; Susana Salgado-Pires; Melanie J Scott; Yoram Vodovotz; Timothy R Billiar
Journal:  Front Immunol       Date:  2017-11-28       Impact factor: 7.561

8.  Long-term Monocyte Dysfunction after Sepsis in Humanized Mice Is Related to Persisted Activation of Macrophage-Colony Stimulation Factor (M-CSF) and Demethylation of PU.1, and It Can Be Reversed by Blocking M-CSF In Vitro or by Transplanting Naïve Autologous Stem Cells In Vivo.

Authors:  Natalia Lapko; Mateusz Zawadka; Jacek Polosak; George S Worthen; Gwenn Danet-Desnoyers; Monika Puzianowska-Kuźnicka; Krzysztof Laudanski
Journal:  Front Immunol       Date:  2017-05-01       Impact factor: 7.561

Review 9.  Is boosting the immune system in sepsis appropriate?

Authors:  Jean-Marc Cavaillon; Damon Eisen; Djilalli Annane
Journal:  Crit Care       Date:  2014-03-24       Impact factor: 9.097

Review 10.  Sterile post-traumatic immunosuppression.

Authors:  Md Nahidul Islam; Benjamin A Bradley; Rhodri Ceredig
Journal:  Clin Transl Immunology       Date:  2016-04-29
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