| Literature DB >> 26557091 |
Emily E Morin1, Ling Guo2, Anna Schwendeman1, Xiang-An Li2.
Abstract
High-density lipoprotein (HDL) is a key component of circulating blood and plays essential roles in regulation of vascular endothelial function and immunity. Clinical data demonstrate that HDL levels drop by 40-70% in septic patients, which is associated with a poor prognosis. Experimental studies using Apolipoprotein A-I (ApoAI) null mice showed that HDL deficient mice are susceptible to septic death, and overexpressing ApoAI in mice to increase HDL levels protects against septic death. These clinical and animal studies support our hypothesis that a decrease in HDL level is a risk factor for sepsis, and raising circulating HDL levels may provide an efficient therapy for sepsis. In this review, we discuss the roles of HDL in sepsis and summarize the efforts of using synthetic HDL as a potential therapy for sepsis.Entities:
Keywords: apolipoprotein A-1 (ApoA1); high-density lipoprotein (HDL); lipopolysaccharide (LPS); sepsis; sepsis therapy
Year: 2015 PMID: 26557091 PMCID: PMC4616240 DOI: 10.3389/fphar.2015.00244
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Front Pharmacol ISSN: 1663-9812 Impact factor: 5.810
Experimental high-density lipoprotein (HDL) therapies in animals models of sepsis and their outcomes.
| HDL | Dose and administration | Sepsis model | Main findings | Reference |
|---|---|---|---|---|
| 18A:Egg PC | 80 mg/kg; prophylactic tail vein IV infusion | Swiss Webster mice; | Three–fourfold increase in 48-h survival rate vs control ( | |
| L-4F Peptide | 25 mg/kg, IP, concurrently with lipopolysaccharide (LPS) | Sprague-Dawley rats; 10 mg/kg LPS; IP injection | Reduction in VCAM-1 expression in excised aortae | |
| 4F Peptide | 10 mg/kg; IP injection post-LPS challenge | Sprague-Dawley rats; LPS 10 mg/kg or 30 mg/kg; IP injection | 10 mg/kg LPS: 4F slowed LPS plasma clearance; reduced hypotension at 6 h; | |
| 4F Peptide | 10 mg/kg, IP, 6 h post-CLP | Sprague-Dawley rats; CLP | Reduced IL-6; restored CO, right atrial pressure, and plasma volume; improved 2-day survival rate; reversed sepsis-induced changes in lipoprotein profile | |
| 4F Peptide | 10 mg/kg; IP injection 6 h post-cecal ligation and puncture (CLP) | Wistar Rats; CLP | Restored renal, hepatic, and cardiac functions; reduced renal tubule damage; restored expression levels of Slit2, Robo4, and eNOS; increased plasma HDL; improved 4-day survival; no change in MAP | |
| D-4F Peptide | 20 μg daily for 9 days; IP injection | C57BL/6J mice; nasally innoculated with 105 PFU influenza virus A/WSN/33 | Prevented lymphoid hyperplasia; increased PON activity; prevented drop in core body temperature; suppressed plasma IL-6 levels; increased plasma HDL and inhibited lipoprotein alteration; reduced viral titers by >50% at all time points | |
| ApoA1 | 10 mg/kg; IP injection 1 h post-LPS challenge | Wistar rats; LPS 1 mg/kg (TNF analysis) or 5 mg/kg (survival study); IP injection | Reduced plasma TNF-α levels in rats given 1 mg/kg LPS; increased 5-day survival rate from 0 to 90% in rats given 5 mg/kg LPS | |
| ApoA1, human plasma purified | 100 mg/kg; IV infusion post-LPS challenge | Balb/c mice; LPS 5 mg/kg; IP injection | Increased both survival rate and average survival time over 3 days | |
| ApoA1 Milano | 40 mg/kg; prophylactic IV injection | Wistar rats; 400 EU/kg Gram-negative bacterial endotoxin; IV injection | Increase in HDL-C; improved renal and hepatic function; inhibition of cytokines TNF-α, IL-1β, IL-6; reduced expression of ICAM-1 | |
| ApoA1:Soy PC (1:200 mol/mol) | 75 mg/kg ApoA1; prophylactic continuous IV infusion over 25 min | NZW rabbits; LPS 25 μg/kg continuous IV infusion over 6 h; start 20 min post-rHDL treatment | Complete inhibition of TNF-α; prevented LPS-induced hypotension; reduced metabolic acidosis; no significant effect on serum LPS levels | |
| ApoA1:Egg PC | 500 mg/kg ApoA1; IV infusion at 0.1 g/kg/hr; split into three doses: 0.3, 0.1, and 0.1 g/kg administered at 0.5, 8, and 16 h post-infection, respectively | 2-year old Beagles surgically implanted with E. coli-infected fibrin clot | Reduced plasma endotoxin levels; decreased plasma TNF-α; decreased liver function; decreased 2-day survival and average survival time | |
| CSL-111 | 75 mg/kg ApoA1; | NZW Rabbits | (1 a) Prophylactic rHDL: reduced plasma LPS and TNF-α; reduction in metabolic acidosis; no effect on hypotension or blood bacterial levels | |
| CSL-111 | 25 or 50 mg/kg ApoA1; Prophylactic IV infusion over 40 min | NZW rabbits; LPS 10 μg/kg; continuous IV infusion over 2 h; start 15 min post-rHDL completion | Reduced TNF-α levels and increased TNF-α clearance for both rHDL doses; rHDL 50 mg/kg reduced hypotension at | |
| CSL-111 | 40 mg/kg; prophylactic IV infusion over 4 h | Healthy male volunteers (20–28 years); Endotoxin 4 ng/kg IV bolus; given 3.5 h post-rHDL start | Elevated HDL levels; reduced endotoxin-induced clinical symptoms, i.e., chills, myalgia, backache, nausea, and vomiting; reduced plasma cytokine levels of TNF-α, IL-6, and IL-8; inhibited early leukopenia, monopenia, and neutropenia; reduced monocyte CD14 expression |