| Literature DB >> 35163625 |
Abstract
In addition to being a leading cause of morbidity and mortality worldwide, sepsis is also the most common cause of acute kidney injury (AKI). When sepsis leads to the development of AKI, mortality increases dramatically. Since the cardinal feature of sepsis is a dysregulated host response to infection, a disruption of kidney-immune crosstalk is likely to be contributing to worsening prognosis in sepsis with acute kidney injury. Since immune-mediated injury to the kidney could disrupt its protein manufacturing capacity, an investigation of molecules mediating this crosstalk not only helps us understand the sepsis immune response, but also suggests that their supplementation could have a therapeutic effect. Erythropoietin, vitamin D and uromodulin are known to mediate kidney-immune crosstalk and their disrupted production could impact morbidity and mortality in sepsis with acute kidney injury.Entities:
Keywords: acute kidney injury; erythropoietin; immune crosstalk; sepsis; uromodulin; vitamin D
Mesh:
Substances:
Year: 2022 PMID: 35163625 PMCID: PMC8835938 DOI: 10.3390/ijms23031702
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Int J Mol Sci ISSN: 1422-0067 Impact factor: 6.208
Figure 1Sepsis mortality is triphasic, with three major peaks of mortality (black). The need for renal replacement therapy increases rapidly during phase 1 and only gradually thereafter (red). Based on data from [8].
Figure 2Shared pathological features of lethal human sepsis and rodent preclinical models of sepsis.
Figure 3Macrophage dysfunctions linked to increased sepsis mortality.
Figure 4Kidney immune crosstalk in health and sepsis. Uromodulin’s immunomodulatory and anti-oxidative stress roles are well established in the healthy kidney, but it is unknown if these extend to sepsis. Vitamin D is known to promote phagocytosis and chemotaxis while suppressing inflammatory cytokine production. It can also mitigate renal oxidative stress. Erythropoeitin promotes efferocytosis and suppresses inflammatory gene expression. Damage- and pathogen-associated molecular patterns (DAMPs/PAMPs) increase in sepsis due to pathogen infiltration and cell damage. Kidney injury can modulate the levels of kidney-derived molecules. Erythropoietin increases with kidney injury while sufficient levels of kidney injury can deplete both uromodulin and vitamin D.
Kidney-derived molecules that could mediate kidney–immune crosstalk in sepsis.
| Molecule of Interest | Lessons Learned from Animal Models | Results from Human Sepsis | Future Work Needed |
|---|---|---|---|
| Erythropoietin | Primes macrophages for efferocytosis of apoptotic cells and suppresses | Levels increase in sepsis [ | Identification of sepsis |
| Vitamin D | Enhances macrophage phagocytosis and chemotaxis and suppresses inflammatory | Systemic levels are predictors of sepsis survival [ | Vitamin D treatment in other preclinical animal models of sepsis |
| Uromodulin | Regulates macrophage number and phagocytic function [ | Levels decrease in AKI [ | Characterization of |