| Literature DB >> 32059698 |
Gustav van Niekerk1, Charné Meaker2, Anna-Mart Engelbrecht2.
Abstract
Despite sound basis to suspect that aggressive and early administration of nutritional support may hold therapeutic benefits during sepsis, recommendations for nutritional support have been somewhat underwhelming. Current guidelines (ESPEN and ASPEN) recognise a lack of clear evidence demonstrating the beneficial effect of nutritional support during sepsis, raising the question: why, given the perceived low efficacy of nutritionals support, are there no high-quality clinical trials on the efficacy of permissive underfeeding in sepsis? Here, we review clinically relevant beneficial effects of permissive underfeeding, motivating the urgent need to investigate the clinical benefits of delaying nutritional support during sepsis.Entities:
Keywords: Autophagy; Nutritional support; Permissive underfeeding; Sepsis
Mesh:
Year: 2020 PMID: 32059698 PMCID: PMC7023788 DOI: 10.1186/s13054-020-2771-4
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Crit Care ISSN: 1364-8535 Impact factor: 9.097
Fig. 1Autophagy is an evolutionarily conserved stress response that is upregulated by a range of cellular stressors, including fasting as well as various pro-inflammatory signals. In turn, this catabolic process may be dynamically repurposed to resolve a range of cellular stresses that may emerge during sepsis. This includes the removal of large protein structures as well as remodelling of the proteome to better accommodate emerging stressors faced during sepsis. ER-phagy as well as aggrephagy plays a role in preventing the accumulation of toxic protein aggregates, whereas xenophagy represents an indispensable mechanism in cell-autonomous defence against intercellular pathogens. Autophagy is also involved in the processing and presentation of both endogenous and exogenously derived epitopes, thereby playing a potential role in regulating the immunogenicity of infected cells. Autophagy also has a well-established role in reshaping the proteome. As an example, recent findings in cancer cells revealed an exquisite selectivity in the pool of proteins targeted for degradation and that such remodelling of the proteome may promote cell survival by attenuating inflammatory processes