Literature DB >> 22144495

Hematopoietic stem-progenitor cells restore immunoreactivity and improve survival in late sepsis.

Laura Brudecki1, Donald A Ferguson, Deling Yin, Gene D Lesage, Charles E McCall, Mohamed El Gazzar.   

Abstract

Sepsis progresses from an early/acute hyperinflammatory to a late/chronic hypoinflammatory phase with immunosuppression. As a result of this phenotypic switch, mortality in late sepsis from persistent primary infection or opportunistic new infection often exceeds that in acute sepsis. Emerging data support that persistence of the hypoinflammatory (hyporesponsive) effector immune cells during late sepsis might involve alterations in myeloid differentiation/maturation that generate circulating repressor macrophages that do not readily clear active infection. Here, we used a cecal ligation and puncture (CLP) murine model of prolonged sepsis to show that adoptive transfer of CD34(+) hematopoietic stem-progenitor cells after CLP improves long-term survival by 65%. CD34(+) cell transfer corrected the immunosuppression of late sepsis by (i) producing significantly higher levels of proinflammatory mediators upon ex vivo stimulation with the Toll-like receptor 4 (TLR4) agonist lipopolysaccharide, (ii) enhancing phagocytic activity of peritoneal macrophages, and (iii) clearing bacterial peritonitis. Improved immunity by CD34(+) cell transfer decreased inflammatory peritoneal exudate of surviving late-sepsis mice. Cell tracking experiments showed that the transferred CD34(+) cells first appeared in the bone marrow and then homed to the spleen and peritoneum. Because CD34(+) cells did not affect the early-phase hyperinflammatory response, it is likely that the newly incorporated pluripotent CD34(+) cells differentiated into competent immune cells in blood and tissue, thereby reversing or replacing the hyporesponsive endotoxin-tolerant cells that occur and persist after the initiation of early sepsis.

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Year:  2011        PMID: 22144495      PMCID: PMC3264285          DOI: 10.1128/IAI.05480-11

Source DB:  PubMed          Journal:  Infect Immun        ISSN: 0019-9567            Impact factor:   3.441


  68 in total

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5.  MicroRNA 21 (miR-21) and miR-181b couple with NFI-A to generate myeloid-derived suppressor cells and promote immunosuppression in late sepsis.

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6.  Processing Body Formation Limits Proinflammatory Cytokine Synthesis in Endotoxin-Tolerant Monocytes and Murine Septic Macrophages.

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