| Literature DB >> 28779451 |
Anthony Bonavia1, Lauren Miller1, John A Kellum2,3, Kai Singbartl4,5,6.
Abstract
BACKGROUND: Mounting evidence suggests that sepsis-induced morbidity and mortality are due to both immune activation and immunosuppression. Resistin is an inflammatory cytokine and uremic toxin. Septic hyperresistinemia (plasma resistin >20 ng/ml) has been associated with greater disease severity and worse outcomes, and it is further exacerbated by concomitant acute kidney injury (AKI). Septic hyperresistinemia disturbs actin polymerization in neutrophils leading to impaired neutrophil migration, a crucial first-line mechanism in host defense to bacterial infection. Our experimental objective was to study the effects of hyperresistinemia on other F-actin-dependent neutrophil defense mechanisms, in particular intracellular bacterial clearance and generation of reactive oxygen species (ROS). We also sought to examine the effects of hemoadsorption on hyperresistinemia and neutrophil dysfunction.Entities:
Keywords: Hemoadsorption therapy; Neutrophil dysfunction; Reactive oxygen species; Resistin; Septic shock
Year: 2017 PMID: 28779451 PMCID: PMC5544662 DOI: 10.1186/s40635-017-0150-5
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Intensive Care Med Exp ISSN: 2197-425X
Fig. 1a Patients with septic shock had higher plasma resistin levels compared to postoperative ICU patients without sepsis or AKI. b There is a strong correlation between hyperresistinemia and inhibition of transwell migration in NB4PMN cells suspended in serum from patients with septic shock
Fig. 2Neither cytochalasin B nor resistin affects extracellular bacterial clearance by NB4PMN cells (a). NB4PMN cells exposed to resistin (100 ng/ml) exhibited lower intracellular bacterial clearance rates compared to controls but similar to that observed with cytochalasin B incubation (b). Total bacterial clearance was significantly impaired by both cytochalasin B and resistin (100 ng/ml) (c). Resistin impairs reactive oxygen species production by neutrophils in a dose-dependent manner (d). N = 6 for all experiments
Fig. 3Resistin impairs PDPK1 phosphorylation in a dose-dependent manner (a). This effect appears more pronounced after neutrophil stimulation with fMLP (b). N = 4 for all experiments
Fig. 4Hemoadsorption therapy using Amberchrome CG161M™ columns reduces serum concentrations of resistin (a). Amberchrome CG161M™ treatment als restores impaired NB4PMN cell transwell migration (b) and ROS production back to normal levels (c). N = 4 for all experiments
Fig. 5Hemoadsorption treatment with Cytosorb™ corrects hyperresistinemia by removing more than 50% of excessive resistin from resistin-spiked serum (a, b). Incubation of NB4PMN cells in resistin-spiked serum prior to hemoadsorption treatment reveals impaired intracellular P. aeruginosa clearance compared to incubation in control serum (c). However, incubation of NB4PMN cells in resistin-spiked serum after hemoadsorption treatment shows restitution of normal intracellular bacterial clearance (d)