| Literature DB >> 35774351 |
Maria Iuliana Ghenu1,2, Dorin Dragoş1,2, Maria Mirabela Manea1,3, Dorin Ionescu1,4, Lucian Negreanu1,5.
Abstract
Sepsis is a critical condition resulting from the excessive activation of the inflammatory/immune system in response to an infection, with high mortality if treatment is not administered promptly. One of the many possible complications of sepsis is liver dysfunction with consequent cholestasis. The aim of this paper is to review the main mechanisms involved in the development of cholestasis in sepsis. Cholestasis in a septic patient must raise the suspicion that it is the consequence of the septic condition and limit the laborious attempts of finding a hepatic or biliary disease. Prompt antibiotic administration when sepsis is suspected is essential and may improve liver enzymes. Cholestasis is a syndrome with a variety of etiologies, among which sepsis is frequently overlooked, despite a number of studies and case reports in the literature demonstrating not only the association between sepsis and cholestasis but also the role of cholestasis as a prognostic factor for sepsis-induced death.Entities:
Keywords: bile acids; carrier proteins; hepatocytes; inflammation; lipopolysaccharide
Year: 2022 PMID: 35774351 PMCID: PMC9218521 DOI: 10.1002/jgh3.12771
Source DB: PubMed Journal: JGH Open ISSN: 2397-9070
The main hepatocellular transport proteins and their principal functions
| Hepatocellular transport proteins | Function | Reference |
|---|---|---|
| Sodium‐taurocholate co‐transporting polypeptide | Bile acids transport from plasma into the hepatocyte |
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| Organic anion‐transporting polypeptides | Uptake of many compounds such as conjugated and unconjugated bile acids and unconjugated bilirubin into the hepatocytes |
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| Bile salt export pump | Bile salts excretion into the bile ducts |
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| Multidrug resistance‐associated protein 2 | Conjugated bile acids excretion from hepatocytes into bile |
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| Transport non‐bile salt organic anions, reduced glutathione, and mono‐ and bisglucuronosyl bilirubin from hepatocytes into the bile ducts |
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| Multidrug resistance‐associated proteins 3 and 4 | Expulsion of bile acids into the bloodstream |
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Figure 1Sepsis‐induced disruption of the: (i) Cytoskeletal architecture (black arrow) in the liver cells (four points star) lining the bile canaliculi (five points star), (ii) tight junctions (open arrow) between hepatocytes, and (iii) transporter proteins' activity in liver cell membrane: sodium‐taurocholate co‐transporting polypeptide (NTCP) (which transports bile acids from plasma into hepatocytes), organic anions transporting polypeptides (OATP) (which transports conjugated and unconjugated bile acids and unconjugated bilirubin into hepatocytes), bile salt export pump (BSEP) (which transports bile salts into bile ducts), multidrug resistance protein (MRP) 2 (which transports conjugated bile acids and conjugated bilirubin from hepatocytes into bile ducts). MRP 3 and MRP 4 mediate the expulsion of bile acids from hepatocyte into the bloodstream, acting as a protective mechanism activated in cholestatic conditions. BAs, bile acids; BSEP, bile salt export pump; CB, conjugated bilirubin; UCB, unconjugated bilirubin.
The main mechanisms involved in the development of sepsis‐associated cholestasis and reports of sepsis‐related cholestasis (H, human study; T, in vitro study; V, in vivo study)
| Sepsis model (where applicable) | Type of study | Findings | Reference |
|---|---|---|---|
| Mechanisms interfering with membrane pumps activity | |||
| NTCP + Na + K + ‐ATPase | |||
| LPS i.p. | (V) Sprague–Dawley rats or C57BL/6 mice | TNF‐α and IL 1β → ↓ NTCP (mRNA, expression and uptake); ↓ Na + K + ‐ATPase → cholestasis and inflammation |
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| NTCP + MRP | |||
| LPS (1 mg/kg body weight i.p.) +/− ICKT for 4 weeks | (V) Male Sprague–Dawley rats | LPS: ↓ bile flow, ↓ biliary bile salts and glutathione excretion, ↓NTCP and MRP 2 |
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| ICKT: less intense ↓ bile flow, normalization of glutathione excretion, ↑ MRP 2 → partially prevents LPS‐induced cholestasis |
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| NTCP + MRP+ BSEP | |||
| Autologous feces i.p +/− adequate resuscitation | (V) Domestic female pigs | ↓ NTCP and BSEP, ↑ MRP 4, ↓ MRP 2 |
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| BSEP + MRP | |||
| LPS (2.5 mg/kg i.v.) | (V) Male Sprague–Dawley rats | ↓ BSEP, ↓ MRP 2 → ↓ biliary excretion, ↓ bile flow |
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| NTCP + ecto‐ATPase | |||
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| (V) Adult male Sprague–Dawley rats | ↓ NTCP and canalicular ecto‐ATPase → ↓taurocholate transport → sepsis‐associated cholestasis |
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| Rlst‐1 + NTCP | |||
| Bile duct ligation model or cecum ligation and puncture model | (V) Male Sprague–Dawley rats | ↓ rlst‐1 mRNA → ↓ taurocholate Transport (sodium‐independent manner) |
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| ↓ Bile acid secretion into bile and ↓ organic anion transport | |||
| Sepsis model: LPS i.p., SIRS model: sterile abscess formation (turpentine i.m.); bile acids (cholyltaurine and chemodeoxycholyltaurine) and organic anion (Sulfolithocholyltaurine) | (V) Rats | Sepsis: ↓ transport of bile acids and organic anions SIRS: no alteration of transport |
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| LPS 0.3 mg/100 g body i.p.; bile acids (cholyltaurine and chenodeoxycholyltaurine) and organic anions (sulfobromophthalein and sulfolithocholyltaurine) | (V) Male Sprague–Dawley rats | ↓ Basolateral and canalicular bile acid ↓ organic anion transport, ↓ ATP‐stimulated transport → cholestasis |
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| ↓ Bile acids excretion | |||
| LPS +/− SEB (50 μg/kg) infused into the IVC or IPV | (V) Adult male Sprague–Dawley rats | ↓ Bile acid excretion |
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| Endotoxin (7.5 mg/kg i.v.) or monoclonal anti‐TNF‐α antibody followed by endotoxin | (V, T) Male Sprague–Dawley rats, rat hepatocytes | ↓ Basal bile flow and salt excretion, ↓ bile salt stimulated bile flow; anti‐TNF‐α antibody blocked endotoxin‐associated cholestasis |
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| ↓ Bile salts uptake by hepatocyte, ↓ bile acids secretion into bile | |||
| Endotoxin production by eight common bacterial pathogens | (T) Hepatocytes from male Sprague–Dawley rat livers | ↓ Bile salt uptake |
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| Human stool suspension (1.2 μL/g body weight i.p) | (V) Male, 17–20‐week‐old C57BL/6 mice |
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| Mechanisms interfering with nuclear receptors | |||
| FXR | |||
| LPS (20 mg/kg for 6 h; 30 mg/kg for survival assays, i.p.) | (V, T) Specific pathogen‐free male C57BL/6 mice Human acute monocytic leukemia cell line THP‐1 | Endotoxemia: ↑ OSTβ,↓ NTCP and BSEP → ↑ bile acids, ↓ FXR → ↑ NLRP3 inflammasome activation |
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| Extensive surgery (“surgical critical illness”) or extensive surgery, cecal ligation and puncture (CLP) (“septic critical illness”) | (V, H) 24‐week‐old male C57BL/6J mice, human patients with either short or long intensive care unit stay | ↑ Bile acids, ↓ FXR and RXR, ↓ basolateral and canalicular transporters, ↑ MRP 3 and MRP 4 |
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| Vivo: cecal ligation and puncture vitro: +/−medium containing dexamethasone | (V, T) Male Sprague–Dawley rats, hepatocytes derived from rats with sepsis | ↓ RXR‐α and FXR; ↓ RXR‐α translocation from cytosol to nucleus, ↓mRNA rBAT (↓ rBAT level); Dexamethasone: reversed sepsis‐inhibited RXR‐α, FXR/RXR binding to rBAT DNA and rBAT protein expression |
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| LPS (10 mg/kg i.p) OCA (5 mg/kg gavage) | (V) Male C57BL/6 mice | OCA → ↑ FXR and BSEP, ↓ LPS‐induced hepatocyte apoptosis and inflammatory infiltration, ↓ ALT, AST, TBA and TB,↓ IL‐1β, TNF‐α, IL‐6 → ↓ bile acid synthesis; stimulated ATF4‐mediated autophagy activity |
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| NTCP + HNF | |||
| LPS (1 mg/kg body i.p.) | (V) Male Sprague–Dawley rats | ↓ HNF 1 and FpB BP → ↓ NTCP mRNA; ↑ NF‐κB and AP‐1 |
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| LPS (1 mg/kg i.p.) | (V) Male Sprague–Dawley rats (+/− with depletion Kupffer cells) | Complete depletion Kupffer cells:↓ IL‐1β and TNF‐α gene expression, ↓ TNF‐α binding levels, ↑ NTCP RNA, ↓ plasma bile salt, preserved activity of RXR:RAR and HNF1α |
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| Activation of LPS/TLR4 signaling pathway | |||
| LPS (1 mg/kg i.p.), LPS (5 mg/kg i.p.) | (V) TLR4‐normal C3H/OuJ mice, TLR4‐mutant C3H/HeJ mice | ↓ Oatp4 mRNA levels through TLR4 |
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| LPS (1 μg/mL) for 18 h | (T) Normal human cholangiocyte | LPS + TLR4 → ↓ ITPR3 via NF‐κB → impairs ductular bicarbonate secretion |
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| Activation of PI3K signaling pathway | |||
| Peritoneal contamination and infection | (V) PI3Kγ KO and PI3Kγ KD mice lacking or expressing kinase‐inactive PI3Kγ | ↑ PI3K/Akt signaling → ↓ MRP 2 → ↑ hepatic excretory dysfunction |
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| Peritoneal contamination and infection with a stool suspension hepatoblastoma cells: a mix of TNF‐α, IL‐1β, IFN‐γ, and LPS | (V, T, H) Male Wistar rats, PI3Kγ−/− (12–16 weeks) mice, human hepatoblastoma cells, plasma from 48 patients fulfilling standard criteria for severe sepsis/septic shock | ↑ Plasma bile acids, ↓ BSEP and MRP 2 ↑ PI3K → internalization of pseudovilli |
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| Generation of a pro‐inflammatory state | |||
| NO | |||
| NO donors sodium nitroprusside and S‐nitrosocysteine | (T) Human hepatoma cell line stably expressing NTCP (HuH‐NTCP) | NO → S‐nitrosylation of NTCP → ↓ TC uptake ↓ NTCP in the membrane |
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| LPS (4 mg/kg body i.p.) | (V) Male Sprague–Dawley rats | ↑ Portal and systemic NO2 − + NO3 − plasma levels but LPS‐induced NO does not modulate bile formation ↓ HCO3 −, and glutathione output → ↓ bile flow |
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| IL‐6 | |||
| Cecal ligation and puncture +/‐IL‐6 | (V, T) Male Sprague–Dawley rats, IL‐6‐treated cultured hepatocytes from the livers of normal rats | ↓ NTCP and MRP 2 transcription → hyperbilirubinemia and cholestasis |
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| Media containing IL‐6 | (T) Cultured rat hepatocytes | ↓ Na + K + ‐ATPase → ↓ sodium‐dependent taurocholate uptake → cholestasis |
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| Cecal ligation and puncture +/− recombinant human interleukin‐6 | (V) Male adolescent C57Bl6 interleukin‐6 +/+ and interleukin‐6 −/− mice. | Absence of IL‐6 → ↑ hepatic dysfunction and mortality in sepsis ↓ IL‐6 activity → failed bile acid and organic anion clearance, enhanced hepatocellular injury, failed regeneration, poor outcome. |
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| IL 8 + CCL2 + CXCL2 | |||
| Autologous feces i.p | (V) Domestic female pigs | ↑ IL8, CCL2, and CXCL2 → inflammatory reaction and recruitment of monocytes and neutrophils |
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| P‐selectin | |||
| A combination of LPS (0.4 mg/kg, i.p.) +/− pretreated with an anti‐P‐selectin antibody | (V) Adult male C57/BL/6 mice | Immunoneutralization of P‐selectin: ↓ leukocyte infiltration, ↓ hepatocellular apoptosis and necrosis, maintains intact bile flow, expression of hepatocyte transporters, and excretory function |
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| Mechanisms interfering with aquaporins | |||
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| (V) Adult male Wistar rats | LPS → ↑TNF‐α → ↓ AQP8 (cytokine‐induced AQP8 proteolysis) → ↓ canalicular membrane water permeability → LPS‐induced cholestasis |
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| (V) Adult male Wistar rats | AdhAQP1‐treatment improves LPS‐induced cholestasis by stimulating the BSEP/ABCB11‐mediated biliary bile acid excretion |
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| Impairment of liver enzymes with hepatic histopathological changes | |||
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| (H, V) Observational study: patients with | Hyperbilirubinemia in |
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| LPS (5 mg/kg, i.p.) 100 mg/kg UDCA p.o. for 10 days | (V) Male albino rats | LPS → ↑TBIL, GGT, ALP, AST, ↑ hepatocyte apoptosis, ↑ TNF‐α, IL‐1α, and IL‐4; UDCA →↓ AST, GGT, ALP, ↓ hepatocyte apoptosis, ↓ TNF‐α, ↓ CD3 T‐cell co‐receptor protein, improvement of histopathological features of inflammation |
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| (H) Inpatients who had elevations of ALP above 1000 U/l, observational study | Extremely high elevations of ALP: in sepsis, malignant obstruction, and AIDS |
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| Gram‐negative or Gram‐positive infection | (H) Retrospective study, 4 cases with Gram‐negative or Gram‐positive infection | Disproportionately high levels of BT compared to GOT, GPT, LDH, ALP and GGT levels, histological: cholestasis, Kupffer cell hyperplasia and cell infiltration in the sinusoid and portal areas |
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| Intraperitoneal sepsis (IS) group by cecal ligation and total parenteral nutrition (TPN) group | (V) Female adult Wistar rats | IS group: degeneration of hepatolobules, enlargement of bile canaliculi with altered microvilli |
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| 1.75 mL/kg stool suspension i.p. | (V) Male Wistar rats; the organic anionic dyes: indocyanine green and benzopyrylium‐based hemocyanine | Sepsis → liver injury, cholestasis, sinusoidal perfusion impairment → ↓ excretion and accumulation organic anions in the liver parenchyma |
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| (Case report) A 46‐year‐old man with mediastinal abscess that contained acid‐fast bacilli | ↑ Conjugated bilirubin, near‐normal ALT, ALP, and PT; after treatment: bilirubin normalization |
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| (Case report) A 58‐year‐old woman septic shock from pneumonia and severe acute respiratory distress syndrome | ↑ Bilirubin, GGT and ALP, → sepsis‐related cholestasis |
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| (Case report) A 48‐year‐old woman with bronchopneumonia ( | Cholestasis and hepatocellular necrosis, hepatosplenomegaly, liver biopsy: intrahepatic cholestasis; after treatment: cholestasis and hepatosplenomegaly disappearance |
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| (Case reports) (1) A 55 year old white female with ulcerative colitis and subphrenic pelvic and lesser sac abscesses. (2) A 66 year old black male with fulminant hepatitis (3) A 58 year old black female with Torulopsis glabrata pneumonia | Intrahepatic cholestasis: inspissated bile within dilated and proliferated portal and periportal bile ductules |
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| (Case report) A 47 years old female with spondylodiscitis and paravertebral abscess | Cholestatic syndrome with jaundice → inflammation‐induced cholestasis |
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| Increased mortality | |||
| Patients with different type of sepsis | (H) Observational prospective single‐center study, 608 patients with sepsis | Sepsis‐associated cholestasis was strongly associated with older age, biomarkers of organ dysfunction, and clinical composite scores (APACHE II and SOFA); higher mortality in patients with sepsis‐associated cholestasis |
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↑, 0.029w?>activating, elevation, increase, upregulated; →, results, cause, induce; ↓, reduce, negative regulator, supress, decrease, downregulated, inhibit; AdhAQP1, adenovirus encoding human aquaporin‐1; AIDS, acquired immune deficiency syndrome; ALP, alkaline phosphatase; ALT, alanine aminotransferase; AP‐1, activating protein 1; AQP8, aquaporin‐8; AST, aspartate aminotransferase; BA, bile acids; BSEP, bile salt export pump; ecto‐ATPase, ecto‐adenosinetriphosphatase; CCL2, C‐C motif chemokine ligand 2; CD 3, cluster of differentiation 3; CDCA, chenodeoxycholic acid; CFU, colony forming units; CXCL2, C‐X‐C Motif Chemokine Ligand 2; DCA, deoxycholic acid; DNA, deoxyribonucleic acid; FpB BP, footprint B binding protein; FXR, Farnesoid X Receptor; GGT, gamma‐glutamyl transferase; GOT, glutamic oxaloacetic transaminase; GPT, glutamate‐pyruvate transaminase; HCO3, bicarbonate; HNF, hepatocyte nuclear factor; i.p., intraperitoneal; i.v., intravenous; ICKT, Inchin‐ko‐to; IL, interleukin; INR, international normalized ratio; IPV, portal vein; ITPR3, type 3 inositol 1,4,5‐trisphosphate receptor; IVC, inferior vena cava; LDH, lactate dehydrogenase; LPS, lipopolysaccharides; mRNA, messenger ribonucleic acid; MRP, multidrug resistance protein; Na + K + ‐ATPase, Na + K + ‐adenosine triphosphatase; NF‐κB, nuclear factor kappaB; NLRP3, nucleotide‐Binding Domain; Leucine‐Rich Repeat Family; Pyrin Domain‐Containing 3; NO, nitric oxide; NTCP, sodium‐taurocholate co‐transporting polypeptide; OATP, organic anions transporting polypeptides; OCA, obeticholic acid; OSTβ, organic solute transporter beta; p.o., per os; PCI, peritoneal contamination and infection; PI3K, phosphatidylinositol 3‐kinase; PT, prothrombin time; rBAT, rat hepatic bile acid coenzyme A‐amino acid N‐acyltransferase; rlst‐1, complementary DNA encoding human liver‐specific organic anion transporter; RXR, Retinoid X Receptor; RXR:RAR, retinoid X receptor‐retinoid acid receptor; SEB, Staphylococcal enterotoxin B; SIRS, systemic inflammatory response syndrome; TBA, total bile acid; TBIL, total bilirubin; TC, sodium‐taurocholate; TLR4, toll‐like receptor 4; TNF‐α, tumor necrosis factor‐α; UDCA, ursodeoxycholic acid.
Figure 2A brief representation of farnesoid X receptor (FXR) role in sepsis‐induced cholestasis. (a) Inflammation‐driven nucleotide‐binding domain (NLRP3) inflammasome consists of intracellular proteins NLRP3, apoptosis‐associated speck‐like protein containing a CARD (ASC), and pro‐caspase 1. FXR, a nuclear receptor, blocks mitochondrial NLRP3 inflammasome assembly by interfering with NLRP3 and pro‐caspase 1. (b) High bile acids levels in the bloodstream lead to: (i) Toll‐like receptor (TLR) ‐nuclear factor‐kappa B (NFκB) pathway activation followed by NLRP3 and pro‐IL‐1β synthesis; (ii) FXR downregulation, which promotes NLRP3 inflammasome assembly with consequent caspase‐1 activation engendering IL‐1β from pro‐IL‐1β. FXR activation by bile acids depresses bile acids synthesis and induces bile salt export pump (BSEP) expression. DAMPs, danger‐associated molecular patterns; IL, Interleukin, leucine‐rich‐containing family, pyrin domain‐containing‐3PAMPs, pathogen‐associated molecular patterns.
Figure 3Bacterial lipopolysaccharides binding to membrane‐bound CD14 (mCD14) activates toll‐like receptor 4 (TLR4), thus switching on protein‐kinases and cytokine synthesis. The soluble CD14 (sCD14) in plasma either originates from mCD14 cleavage or is secreted by various cells. Binding of sCD14 to lipopolysaccharides generates a complex that activates various cells, triggering immune responses. Cleavage of sCD14 by proteases produces presepsin. CD14, cluster of differentiation 14; LBP, lipopolysaccharides binding protein; LPS, lipopolysaccharides.