4.7 Article

Less Severe Polymicrobial Sepsis in Conditional mgmt-Deleted Mice Using LysM-Cre System, Impacts of DNA Methylation and MGMT Inhibitor in Sepsis

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Publisher

MDPI
DOI: 10.3390/ijms241210175

Keywords

sepsis; lipopolysaccharide; macrophages; epigenetics; mgmt

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The absence of mgmt in macrophages resulted in less severe sepsis in the cecal ligation and puncture (CLP) model. However, this protective effect was lost in mice without antibiotics, indicating the importance of microbial control during sepsis immune modulation.
The O6-methylguanine-DNA methyltransferase (MGMT) is a DNA suicide repair enzyme that might be important during sepsis but has never been explored. Then, the proteomic analysis of lipopolysaccharide (LPS)-stimulated wild-type (WT) macrophages increased proteasome proteins and reduced oxidative phosphorylation proteins compared with control, possibly related to cell injury. With LPS stimulation, mgmt null (mgmt(flox/flox); LysM-Cre(cre/-)) macrophages demonstrated less profound inflammation; supernatant cytokines (TNF-& alpha;, IL-6, and IL-10) and pro-inflammatory genes (iNOS and IL-1 & beta;), with higher DNA break (phosphohistone H2AX) and cell-free DNA, but not malondialdehyde (the oxidative stress), compared with the littermate control (mgmt(flox/flox); LysM-Cre(-/-)). In parallel, mgmt null mice (MGMT loss only in the myeloid cells) demonstrated less severe sepsis in the cecal ligation and puncture (CLP) model (with antibiotics), as indicated by survival and other parameters compared with sepsis in the littermate control. The mgmt null protective effect was lost in CLP mice without antibiotics, highlighting the importance of microbial control during sepsis immune modulation. However, an MGMT inhibitor in CLP with antibiotics in WT mice attenuated serum cytokines but not mortality, requiring further studies. In conclusion, an absence of mgmt in macrophages resulted in less severe CLP sepsis, implying a possible influence of guanine DNA methylation and repair in macrophages during sepsis.

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