Literature DB >> 22328944

The role of immunostimulatory nucleic acids in septic shock.

Farag Bleiblo, Paul Michael, Danielle Brabant, Chilakamarti V Ramana, Tc Tai, Mazen Saleh, Joseph E Parrillo, Anand Kumar, Aseem Kumar.   

Abstract

Sepsis and its associated syndromes represent the systemic host response to severe infection and is manifested by varying degrees of hypotension, coagulopathy, and multiorgan dysfunction. Despite great efforts being made to understand this condition and designing therapies to treat sepsis, mortality rates are still high in septic patients. Characterization of the complex molecular signaling networks between the various components of host-pathogen interactions, highlights the difficulty in identifying a single driving force responsible for sepsis. Although triggering the inflammatory response is generally considered as protective against pathogenic threats, the interplay between the signaling pathways that are induced or suppressed during sepsis may harm the host. Numerous surveillance mechanisms have evolved to discriminate self from foreign agents and accordingly provoke an effective cellular response to target the pathogens. Nucleic acids are not only an essential genetic component, but sensing their molecular signature is also an important quality control mechanism which has evolved to maintain the integrity of the human genome. Evidence that has accumulated recently indicated that distinct pattern recognition receptors sense nucleic acids released from infectious organisms or from damaged host cells, resulting in the modulation of intracellular signalling cascades. Immunoreceptor-mediated detection of these nucleic acids induces antigen-specific immunity, secretion of proinflammatory cytokines and reactive oxygen/nitrogen species and thus are implicated in a range of diseases including septic shock.

Entities:  

Keywords:  Sepsis; immunostimulatory nucleic acid; septic shock; signaling networks; therapy

Year:  2012        PMID: 22328944      PMCID: PMC3272682     

Source DB:  PubMed          Journal:  Int J Clin Exp Med        ISSN: 1940-5901


  212 in total

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9.  Characterization of human septic sera induced gene expression modulation in human myocytes.

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