4.6 Article

Old Mice Demonstrate Organ Dysfunction as well as Prolonged Inflammation, Immunosuppression, and Weight Loss in a Modified Surgical Sepsis Model*

Journal

CRITICAL CARE MEDICINE
Volume 47, Issue 11, Pages E919-E929

Publisher

LIPPINCOTT WILLIAMS & WILKINS
DOI: 10.1097/CCM.0000000000003926

Keywords

chronic; inflammation; mouse; organ dysfunction; sepsis

Funding

  1. National Institutes of Health - National Institute of General Medical Sciences (NIGMS) [R01 GM-040586, R01 GM-104481, R01 GM-113945, P50 GM-111152]
  2. National Institutes of Aging [R01AG049711, R01AG052258]
  3. Evelyn F. McKnight Brain Research Foundation
  4. NIGMS [T32 GM-008721]
  5. National Institutes of Health (NIH)
  6. National Institute of General Medical Sciences
  7. National Institute on Aging
  8. NIH
  9. [R01 GM-110240]

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Objectives: Our goal was to reverse translate the human response to surgical sepsis into the mouse by modifying a widely adopted murine intra-abdominal sepsis model to engender a phenotype that conforms to current sepsis definitions and follows the most recent expert recommendations for animal preclinical sepsis research. Furthermore, we aimed to create a model that allows the study of aging on the long-term host response to sepsis. Design: Experimental study. Setting: Research laboratory. Subjects: Young (3-5 mo) and old (18-22 mo) C57BL/6j mice. Interventions: Mice received no intervention or were subjected to polymicrobial sepsis with cecal ligation and puncture followed by fluid resuscitation, analgesia, and antibiotics. Subsets of mice received daily chronic stress after cecal ligation and puncture for 14 days. Additionally, modifications were made to ensure that Minimum Quality Threshold in Pre-Clinical Sepsis Studies recommendations were followed. Measurements and Main Results: Old mice exhibited increased mortality following both cecal ligation and puncture and cecal ligation and puncture + daily chronic stress when compared with young mice. Old mice developed marked hepatic and/or renal dysfunction, supported by elevations in plasma aspartate aminotransferase, blood urea nitrogen, and creatinine, 8 and 24 hours following cecal ligation and puncture. Similar to human sepsis, old mice demonstrated low-grade systemic inflammation 14 days after cecal ligation and puncture + daily chronic stress and evidence of immunosuppression, as determined by increased serum concentrations of multiple pro- and anti-inflammatory cytokines and chemokines when compared with young septic mice. In addition, old mice demonstrated expansion of myeloid-derived suppressor cell populations and sustained weight loss following cecal ligation and puncture + daily chronic stress, again similar to the human condition. Conclusions: The results indicate that this murine cecal ligation and puncture + daily chronic stress model of surgical sepsis in old mice adhered to current Minimum Quality Threshold in Pre-Clinical Sepsis Studies guidelines and met Sepsis-3 criteria. In addition, it effectively created a state of persistent inflammation, immunosuppression, and weight loss, thought to be a key aspect of chronic sepsis pathobiology and increasingly more prevalent after human sepsis.

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