학술논문

Functional Transcriptomic Studies of Immune Responses and Endotoxin Tolerance in Early Human Sepsis
Document Type
article
Source
Shock. 57(6)
Subject
Biomedical and Clinical Sciences
Immunology
Genetics
Clinical Research
Sepsis
Infectious Diseases
Hematology
Aetiology
4.1 Discovery and preclinical testing of markers and technologies
2.1 Biological and endogenous factors
Detection
screening and diagnosis
Inflammatory and immune system
Endotoxin Tolerance
Endotoxins
Humans
Immune Tolerance
Immunity
Inflammation
Lipopolysaccharides
Transcriptome
Endotoxin tolerance
immune system
RNA expression
sepsis
Clinical Sciences
Emergency & Critical Care Medicine
Clinical sciences
Language
Abstract
BackgroundLimited studies have functionally evaluated the heterogeneity in early ex vivo immune responses during sepsis. Our aim was to characterize early sepsis ex vivo functional immune response heterogeneity by studying whole blood endotoxin responses and derive a transcriptional metric of ex vivo endotoxin response.MethodsBlood collected within 24 h of hospital presentation from 40 septic patients was divided into two fractions and incubated with media (unstimulated) or endotoxin. Supernatants and cells were isolated, and responses measured using: supernatant cytokines, lung endothelial permeability after supernatant exposure, and RNA expression. A transcriptomic signature was derived in unstimulated cells to predict the ex vivo endotoxin response. The signature was tested in a separate cohort of 191 septic patients to evaluate for association with clinical outcome. Plasma biomarkers were quantified to measure in vivo host inflammation.ResultsEx vivo response to endotoxin varied and was unrelated to immunosuppression, white blood cell count, or the causative pathogen. Thirty-five percent of patients demonstrated a minimal response to endotoxin, suggesting early immunosuppression. High ex vivo cytokine production by stimulated blood cells correlated with increased in vitro pulmonary endothelial cell permeability and was associated with attenuated in vivo host inflammation. A four-gene signature of endotoxin response detectable without the need for a functional assay was identified. When tested in a separate cohort of septic patients, its expression was inversely associated with hospital mortality.ConclusionsAn attenuated ex vivo endotoxin response in early sepsis is associated with greater host in vivo inflammation and a worse clinical outcome.