Gene/Protein Disease Symptom Drug Enzyme Compound
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Query: UMLS:C0036690 (sepsis)
59,461 document(s) hit in 31,850,051 MEDLINE articles (0.00 seconds)

Pro-apoptotic molecules are generated during sepsis which may be responsible for alteration of organ function in sepsis. Removal of systemic apoptotic activity may affect recovery from sepsis. Current high flux membranes might not be sufficiently permeable to eliminate pro-apoptotic factors. We evaluated the elimination of pro-apoptotic factors induced by LPS in human whole blood by a super-permeable cellulose triacetate membrane (SUREFLUX FH 150, Nipro, Osaka, Japan) in comparison to a standard high flux cellulose triacetate membrane (UT 700, Nipro, Osaka, Japan) and a polyethersulfone plasmafilter (Bellco, Mirandola Italy) in an in vitro blood circulation. We spiked human whole blood with lipopolysaccharide from Escherichia coli (Serotype 026-86, 10 mg/ml), incubated it for 3 hours to allow cytokine generation and recirculated it at 300 ml/min for 3 hours. The UF line was first returned to the blood module at 10 min. After this, the UF was drained from 10 to 60 min at a rate of 1000 ml/h. Zero balance was obtained by re-infusion of bicarbonate buffered hemofiltration fluid. Apoptosis was assessed on U937 monocytes (incubated with plasma or ultrafiltrate) by fluorescence microscopy dyes (Hoechst 33342, propidium iodide) and annexin V flow cytometry. Caspase-3 and Caspase-8 activity was assessed on the recirculated blood monocytes by spectrophotometric methods. IL-2, IL-10 and TNFalpha were determined by commercially available ELISAs. Sieving coefficients and clearances were determined for the different cytokines. Caspase-3 and Caspase-8 were activated by LPS and remained either stable or increased during in vitro circulation. Apoptosis activity of U937 cells, when incubated with the ultrafiltrate, increased in parallel with arterial plasma values (for Uf: UT700 = 23.1%; Sureflux FH150 = 42.5%). However, by 60 min the apoptotic activity recorded with the ultrafiltrate was reduced to the levels of arterial plasma (for Uf: UT700 = 19.8%; Sureflux FH150 = 11.2%). Sieving coefficients in the super-permeable membrane were significantly higher for all measured cytokines in comparison to the standard high flux membrane (e.g. TNFalpha 0.72 vs 0.03 p < 0.001) and close to the values observed for the plasmafiltration membrane. Nevertheless protein losses measured by albumin leakage were much lower with the Sureflux filter in comparison to the plasmafilter. In conclusion, pro-apoptotic factors can be eliminated by dialytic membranes with the removal rate maximized by using super high flux dialysers which may represent a compromise between hemofiltration and plasmafiltration membranes.
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PMID:Caspase-3 and -8 activation and cytokine removal with a novel cellulose triacetate super-permeable membrane in an in vitro sepsis model. 1463 5

Apoptosis(programmed cell death) is induced in pulmonary cells and contributes to the pathogenesis of acute lung injury in septic humans. Previous studies have shown that nitric oxide (NO) is an important modulator of apoptosis; however, the functional role of NO derived from inducible NO synthase (iNOS) in sepsis-induced pulmonary apoptosis remains unknown. We measured pulmonary apoptosis in a rat model of Escherichia coli lipopolysaccharide (LPS)-induced sepsis in the absence and presence of the selective iNOS inhibitor 1400W. Four groups were studied 24 h after saline (control) or LPS injection in the absence and presence of 1400W pretreatment. Apoptosis was evaluated using DNA fragmentation, terminal deoxynucleotidyl transferase-mediated dUTP nick-end labeling staining, and caspase activation. LPS administration significantly augmented pulmonary cell apoptosis and caspase-3 activity in airway and alveolar epithelial cells. Pretreatment with 1400W significantly enhanced LPS-induced pulmonary apoptosis and increased caspase-3 and -7 activation. The antiapoptotic effect of iNOS was confirmed in iNOS-/- mice, which developed a greater degree of pulmonary apoptosis both under control conditions and in response to LPS compared with wild-type mice. By comparison, genetic deletion of the neuronal NOS had no effect on LPS-induced pulmonary apoptosis. We conclude that NO derived from iNOS plays an important protective role against sepsis-induced pulmonary apoptosis.
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PMID:Roles of iNOS and nNOS in sepsis-induced pulmonary apoptosis. 1466 Apr 84

With trauma, sepsis, cancer, or uremia, animals or patients experience accelerated degradation of muscle protein in the ATP-ubiquitin-proteasome (Ub-P'some) system. The initial step in myofibrillar proteolysis is unknown because this proteolytic system does not break down actomyosin complexes or myofibrils, even though it degrades monomeric actin or myosin. Since cytokines or insulin resistance are common in catabolic states and will activate caspases, we examined whether caspase-3 would break down actomyosin. We found that recombinant caspase-3 cleaves actomyosin, producing a characteristic, approximately 14-kDa actin fragment and other proteins that are degraded by the Ub-P'some. In fact, limited actomyosin cleavage by caspase-3 yields a 125% increase in protein degradation by the Ub-P'some system. Serum deprivation of L6 muscle cells stimulates actin cleavage and proteolysis; insulin blocks these responses by a mechanism requiring PI3K. Cleaved actin fragments are present in muscles of rats with muscle atrophy from diabetes or chronic uremia. Accumulation of actin fragments and the rate of proteolysis in muscle stimulated by diabetes are suppressed by a caspase-3 inhibitor. Thus, in catabolic conditions, an initial step resulting in loss of muscle protein is activation of caspase-3, yielding proteins that are degraded by the Ub-P'some system. Therapeutic strategies could be designed to prevent these events.
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PMID:Activation of caspase-3 is an initial step triggering accelerated muscle proteolysis in catabolic conditions. 1470 15

A rodent model of sepsis was used to establish the relationship between caspase inhibition and inhibition of apoptotic cell death in vivo. In this model, thymocyte cell death was blocked by Bcl-2 transgene, indicating that apoptosis was predominantly dependent on the mitochondrial pathway that culminates in caspase-3 activation. Caspase inhibitors, including the selective caspase-3 inhibitor M867, were able to block apoptotic manifestations both in vitro and in vivo but with strikingly different efficacy for different cell death markers. Inhibition of DNA fragmentation required substantially higher levels of caspase-3 attenuation than that required for blockade of other apoptotic events such as spectrin proteolysis and phosphatidylserine externalization. These data indicate a direct relationship between caspase inhibition and some apoptotic manifestations but that small quantities of uninhibited caspase-3 suffice to initiate genomic DNA breakdown, presumably through the escape of catalytic quantities of caspase-activated DNase. These findings suggest that putative caspase-independent apoptosis may be overestimated in some systems since blockade of spectrin proteolysis and other cell death markers does not accurately reflect the high degrees of caspase-3 inhibition needed to prevent DNA fragmentation. Furthermore, this requirement presents substantial therapeutic challenges owing to the need for persistent and complete caspase blockade.
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PMID:Differential efficacy of caspase inhibitors on apoptosis markers during sepsis in rats and implication for fractional inhibition requirements for therapeutics. 1471 17

Our previous studies indicate that hearts from septic rats have decreased work with oxygen wasting. The present studies test if there is energy deficit, changes in cardiac mitochondrial content and caspase activation during sepsis. Anesthetized, male Sprague-Dawley rats received no surgical treatment (control), laparotomy (sham), or laparotomy with cecal ligation and puncture (CLP) to induce polymicrobial septic shock. Hearts were isolated 12-14 h later. Cardiac work, oxygen consumption, substrate oxidation and energy stores were measured in perfused hearts. Normalized density of mitochondria was determined in ventricles without perfusion by morphometric analysis with electron microscopy. Citrate synthase activity was assessed in homogenates and isolated mitochondria. Cardiac work decreased significantly in CLP (47%), while oxygen consumption and glucose oxidation were unchanged compared with control or sham hearts (oxygen and substrate wasting). Tissue adenosine triphosphate, creatine phosphate and glycogen were lower in CLP hearts (energy deficit). Mitochondrial grid intersects decreased significantly from 151 +/- 8 sham to 130 +/- 4 CLP out of 361 possible intersects and autophagy was observed in CLP hearts. Total activity of citrate synthase decreased in homogenates (99 +/- 8 micromol/min/g wet weight sham vs. 62 +/- 7 CLP, P < 0.05) and in the mitochondrial fraction (27 +/- 1 micromol/min/g wet weight sham to 22 +/- 1 CLP, P < 0.05). Calculated mitochondrial content decreased from 63 +/- 4 mg protein/g wet weight sham to 46 +/- 5 CLP, P < 0.05 (mitochondrial depletion). Caspase-3 activity doubled and tumor necrosis factor alpha content tripled in CLP hearts. CONCLUSIONS. - Oxygen and substrate wasting in CLP occurs with fewer mitochondria and energy deficit, processes that are coincident with caspase-3 activation.
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PMID:Metabolic dysfunction and depletion of mitochondria in hearts of septic rats. 1473 56

Although Haemophilus somnus causes septicemia and vasculitis in cattle, relatively little is known about how H. somnus affects endothelial cells in vitro. We previously reported that H. somnus lipooligosaccharide (LOS)-induced activation of caspases-3, -8 and -9, and apoptosis of bovine pulmonary artery endothelial cells (BPAEC) in vitro. Previous reports indicate that the generation of reactive oxygen species (ROS) or reactive nitrogen intermediates (RNI) can contribute to the induction of apoptosis. In the present study, we sought to determine whether ROS and RNI are involved in LOS-mediated apoptosis of BPAEC. We found that H. somnus LOS induced the generation of ROS in BPAEC, which was blocked by pretreatment with membrane permeable ROS scavengers, such as dimethylsulfoxide (DMSO) and allopurinol (AP). Addition of DMSO or AP significantly reduced H. somnus LOS-mediated caspase-3 activation. Addition of membrane impermeable ROS scavengers (e.g. catalase and superoxide dismutase), failed to block LOS-mediated caspase-3 activation, suggesting a role for intracellular generation of ROS in LOS-induced apoptosis of BPAEC. Addition of N(G)-nitro-L-arginine methyl ester (L-NAME) or aminoguanidine, which are selective inhibitors of nitric oxide synthase, blocked NO release and significantly reduced caspase-3 activation in LOS treated BPAEC. These data suggest H. somnus LOS triggers endogenous ROS and RNI production by endothelial cells, which contributes to apoptosis.
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PMID:Reactive oxygen and nitrogen intermediates contribute to Haemophilus somnus lipooligosaccharide-mediated apoptosis of bovine endothelial cells. 1474 Nov 39

The neuropathological correlates of encephalopathy and autonomic dysfunction in septic shock are unclear. We performed post mortem analysis of 5 brain areas susceptible to ischemia and 5 autonomic nuclei (AN) in 23 patients who had died in our intensive care unit (ICU) from septic shock and 8 dying from non-septic shock as well as 5 controls who had died suddenly from extracranial injury. Proinflammatory cytokine (IL1-beta and TNF-alpha) and inducible nitric oxide synthase (iNOS) expression was assessed by immunocytochemistry. Abnormalities in septic shock were: hemorrhages (26%), hypercoagulability syndrome (9%), micro-abscesses (9%), multifocal necrotizing leukoencephalopathy (9%) and ischemia (100%). The incidence of cerebral hemorrhage or hypercoagulability syndrome was not related to clotting disturbances. The intensity of ischemia within susceptible areas was the same in both ICU groups, but more pronounced in the autonomic centers of septic patients (P < 0.0001). Neuronal apoptosis assessed using anti-caspase 3 immunocytochemistry and in situ end labeling was more pronounced in the autonomic nuclei of septic patients. (P < 0.0001). TNF-alpha expression did not differ between groups but vascular iNOS expression assessed by immunocytochemistry was higher in sepsis (P<0.0001) and correlated with autonomic center neuronal apoptosis (P < 0.02). We conclude that septic shock is associated with diffuse cerebral damage and specific autonomic neuronal apoptosis which may be due to circulating factors particularly iNOS.
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PMID:The neuropathology of septic shock. 1499 34

Microvascular endothelial cells (mECs) circulate at higher numbers in patients with severe sepsis and hemophagocytic syndromes. Although these blood mECs might stem from damaged microvasculature, they are perfectly viable and lead to the establishment of cell lines. Such mECs were cultured in low-dose human serum pools (0.5%) and MEM-alpha medium. Antigenic profiling revealed the expression of CD36, factor VIIIa, CD95-ligand, and CD44, but also CD146. We studied the antioxidative effect of the hematopoietic growth factor G-CSF(1) after in vitro stimulation with LPS from E. coli 0111:B4; the growth factor appeared to exhibit a protective effect on organ function in patients with SIRS. mECs were stimulated with 1 micro g/mL of LPS for 24 h and 48 h with and without G-CSF (3x10(3) U/mL) preincubation. After 24 h, supernatants of the stimulated mEC were tested for IL-8 by ELISA, and cells were tested for hemoxygenase-1 (HO-1, Hsp32) by immunohistochemistry and flow cytometry using OSA110 (mAb, Stressgene). Stimulation with LPS upregulated IL-8 by a factor of 2 to 10 in mEC. Preincubation with G-CSF markedly downregulated the LPS-induced IL-8 secretion (20-50%), but IL-6 production was not affected. Upon 48 h of LPS stimulation, mECs developed massive signs of apoptosis and concomitant caspase 3 activation. Caspase 3 activity induced by LPS (24 h) or by staurosporin (6 h) was found to be dramatically downregulated by the G-CSF preincubation protocol.
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PMID:G-CSF modulates LPS-induced apoptosis and IL-8 in human microvascular endothelial cells: involvement of calcium signaling. 1503 98

Both aging and sepsis independently increase splenic and gut epithelial apoptosis. Sepsis-induced apoptosis in either cell type is also associated with increased mortality in young mice. We sought to determine whether age alters sepsis-induced splenic and gut epithelial cell death. Young (2 months) and aged (22 months) male ND4 mice were subjected to either single-puncture cecal ligation and puncture (CLP) with a 23-gauge needle or sham laparotomy. Apoptosis was assessed 24 hours later in the spleen and gut epithelium by active caspase 3 and hematoxylin and eosin staining. Aged septic mice had increased splenic apoptosis compared with either young septic animals or aged sham animals (15 vs. 7 vs. 5 apoptotic cells/high-powered field, P < 0.05). Similarly, aged septic animals had an elevation in gut epithelial cell death compared with either young septic or aged sham mice (33 vs. 16 vs. 6 apoptotic cells/100 contiguous crypts, P < 0.05). Elevated intestinal cell death was not associated with changes in either gut proliferation or cell division. To verify that the increase in splenic apoptosis seen in septic aged animals was not strain specific, double-puncture CLP with a 25-gauge needle or sham laparotomy was performed on young (4 months) or aged (24 months) C57BL/6 male mice. Similar to results seen in outbred animals, aged septic animals in this inbred strain had increased splenic apoptosis compared with either young septic animals or aged sham animals (23 vs. 7 vs. 4 apoptotic cells/ high powered field, P < 0.05). These results indicate that although infection and aging each independently cause an increase in splenic and gut epithelial apoptosis, their combination leads to a disproportionate increase in cell death in these rapidly dividing cell populations,and potentially plays a role in the marked increase in mortality seen with aging in sepsis.
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PMID:Age disproportionately increases sepsis-induced apoptosis in the spleen and gut epithelium. 1537 93

The human sepsis syndrome resulting from bacterial infection continues to account for a significant proportion of hospital mortality. Neutralizing strategies aimed at individual bacterial wall products (such as LPS) have enjoyed limited success in this arena. Bacterial lipoprotein (BLP) is a major constituent of the wall of diverse bacterial forms and profoundly influences cellular function in vivo and in vitro, and has been implicated in the etiology of human sepsis. Delayed polymorphonuclear cell (PMN) apoptosis is a characteristic feature of human sepsis arising from Gram-negative or Gram-positive bacterial infection. Bacterial wall product ligation and subsequent receptor-mediated events upstream of caspase inhibition in neutrophils remain incompletely understood. BLP has been shown to exert its cellular effects primarily through TLR-2, and it is now widely accepted that lateral associations with the TLRs represent the means by which CD14 communicates intracellular messages. In this study, we demonstrate that BLP inhibits neutrophil mitochondrial membrane depolarization with a subsequent reduction in caspase-3 processing, ultimately leading to a significant delay in PMN apoptosis. Pretreatment of PMNs with an anti-TLR-2 mAb or anti-CD14 mAb prevented BLP from delaying PMN apoptosis to such a marked degree. Combination blockade using both mAbs completely prevented the effects of BLP (in 1 and 10 ng/ml concentrations) on PMN apoptosis. At higher concentrations of BLP, the antiapoptotic effects were observed, but were not as pronounced. Our findings therefore provide the first evidence of a crucial role for both CD14 and TLR-2 in delayed PMN apoptosis arising from bacterial infection.
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PMID:Bacterial lipoprotein delays apoptosis in human neutrophils through inhibition of caspase-3 activity: regulatory roles for CD14 and TLR-2. 1547 68


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