4.5 Article

HS1 deficiency protects against sepsis by attenuating neutrophil-inflicted lung damage

期刊

EUROPEAN JOURNAL OF CELL BIOLOGY
卷 101, 期 2, 页码 -

出版社

ELSEVIER GMBH
DOI: 10.1016/j.ejcb.2022.151214

关键词

Inflammation; HCLS; Cortactin; Diapedesis; Neutrophil extravasation; Actin dynamics

资金

  1. Mexican Council for Science and Technology (CONACYT) [207268]
  2. Agencia Mexicana de Cooperacion Internacional para el Desarrollo (AMEXCID) of the Secretaria de Relaciones Exteriores (SRE) [AMEXCID_2020-4]
  3. CONACYT
  4. National Strategic Health Program
  5. National Institutes of Health [R35GM124911, T32HL134625]

向作者/读者索取更多资源

Neutrophil recruitment plays a critical role in sepsis, while excessive recruitment can lead to tissue damage. The actin-binding protein HS1 has been identified as a key regulator in neutrophil extravasation and its importance in sepsis has been demonstrated in a lethal sepsis model. HS1-deficient mice showed better survival, reduced lung damage and inflammation in sepsis. The absence of HS1 attenuated systemic neutrophil recruitment and altered expression of various molecules.
Sepsis remains an important health problem worldwide due to inefficient treatments often resulting in multi organ failure. Neutrophil recruitment is critical during sepsis. While neutrophils are required to combat invading bacteria, excessive neutrophil recruitment contributes to tissue damage due to their arsenal of molecular weapons that do not distinguish between host and pathogen. Thus, neutrophil recruitment needs to be fine-tuned to ensure bacterial killing, while avoiding neutrophil-inflicted tissue damage. We recently showed that the actin-binding protein HS1 promotes neutrophil extravasation; and hypothesized that HS1 is also a critical regulator of sepsis progression. We evaluated the role of HS1 in a model of lethal sepsis induced by cecal-ligation and puncture. We found that septic HS1-deficient mice had a better survival rate compared to WT mice due to absence of lung damage. Lungs of septic HS1-deficient mice showed less inflammation, fibrosis, and vascular congestion. Importantly, systemic CLP-induced neutrophil recruitment was attenuated in the lungs, the peritoneum and the cremaster in the absence of HS1. Lungs of HS1-deficient mice produced significantly more interleukin-10. Compared to WT neutrophils, those HS1-deficient neutrophils that reached the lungs had increased surface levels of Gr-1, ICAM-1, and L-selectin. Interestingly, HS1-deficient neutrophils had similar F actin content and phagocytic activity, but they failed to polymerize actin and deform in response to CXCL-1 likely explaining the reduced systemic neutrophil recruitment in HS1-deficient mice. Our data show that HS1 deficiency protects against sepsis by attenuating neutrophil recruitment to amounts sufficient to combat bacterial infection, but insufficient to induce tissue damage.

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