Role of extracellular histones in the cardiomyopathy of sepsis

Miriam Kalbitz(University of Michigan), Jamison Grailer(University of Michigan), Fatemeh Fattahi(University of Michigan), Lawrence Jajou(University of Michigan), Todd J. Herron(University of Michigan), Katherine Campbell(University of Michigan), Firas S. Zetoune(University of Michigan), Markus Bosmann(Johannes Gutenberg University Mainz), J. Vidya Sarma(University of Michigan), Markus Huber‐Lang(University Hospital Ulm), Florian Gebhard(University Hospital Ulm), Randall Loaiza(University of Michigan), Héctor H. Valdivia(University of Michigan), José Jalife(University of Michigan), Mark W. Russell(University of Michigan), Peter A. Ward(University of Michigan)
The FASEB Journal
February 13, 2015
Cited by 103

Abstract

ABSTRACT The purpose of this study was to define the relationship in polymicrobial sepsis (in adult male C57BL/6 mice) between heart dysfunction and the appearance in plasma of extracellular histones. Procedures included induction of sepsis by cecal ligation and puncture and measurement of heart function using echocardiogram/Doppler parameters. We assessed the ability of histones to cause disequilibrium in the redox status and intracellular [Ca 2+ ] i levels in cardiomyocytes (CMs) (from mice and rats). We also studied the ability of histones to disturb both functional and electrical responses of hearts perfused with histones. Main findings revealed that extracellular histones appearing in septic plasma required C5a receptors, polymorphonuclear leukocytes (PMNs), and the Nacht‐, LRR‐, and PYD‐domains‐containing protein 3 (NLRP3) inflammasome. In vitro exposure of CMs to histones caused loss of homeostasis of the redox system and in [Ca 2+ ] i , as wellas defects in mitochondrial function. Perfusion of hearts with histones caused electrical and functional dysfunction. Finally, in vivo neutralization of histones in septic mice markedly reduced the parameters of heart dysfunction. Histones caused dysfunction in hearts during polymicrobial sepsis. These events could be attenuated by histone neutralization, suggesting that histones may be targets in the setting of sepsis to reduce cardiac dysfunction.—Kalbitz, M., Grailer, J. J., Fattahi, F., Jajou, L., Herron, T. J., Campbell, K. F., Zetoune, F. S., Bosmann, M., Sarma, J. V., Huber‐Lang, M., Gebhard, F., Loaiza, R., Valdivia, H. H., Jalife, J., Russell, M. W., Ward, P. A. Role of extracellular histones in the cardiomyopathy of sepsis. FASEB J. 29, 2185‐2193 (2015). www.fasebj.org


Related Papers

No related papers found

Powered by citation graph analysis