TY - JOUR
T1 - Paediatric sepsis survivors are resistant to sepsis‐induced long‐term immune dysfunction
AU - Colón, David F.
AU - Wanderley, Carlos W.
AU - Turato, Walter M.
AU - Borges, Vanessa F.
AU - Franchin, Marcelo
AU - Castanheira, Fernanda V. S.
AU - Nascimento, Daniele
AU - Prado, Douglas
AU - de Lima, Mikhael Haruo Fernandes
AU - Volpon, Leila C.
AU - Kavaguti, Silvia K.
AU - Carlotti, Ana P.
AU - Carmona, Fabio
AU - Franklin, Bernardo S.
AU - Cunha, Thiago M.
AU - Alves‐Filho, Jose Carlos
AU - Cunha, Fernando Q.
N1 - Publisher Copyright:
© 2023 British Pharmacological Society.
PY - 2024/4
Y1 - 2024/4
N2 - Background and Purpose: Sepsis-surviving adult individuals commonly develop immunosuppression and increased susceptibility to secondary infections, an outcome mediated by the axis IL-33/ILC2s/M2 macrophages/Tregs. Nonetheless, the long-term immune consequences of paediatric sepsis are indeterminate. We sought to investigate the role of age in the genesis of immunosuppression following sepsis. Experimental Approach: Here, we compared the frequency of Tregs, the activation of the IL-33/ILC2s axis in M2 macrophages and the DNA methylation of epithelial lung cells from post-septic infant and adult mice. Likewise, sepsis-surviving mice were inoculated intranasally with Pseudomonas aeruginosa or by subcutaneous inoculation of the B16 melanoma cell line. Finally, blood samples from sepsis-surviving patients were collected and the concentration of IL-33 and Tregs frequency were assessed. Key Results: In contrast to 6-week-old mice, 2-week-old mice were resistant to secondary infection and did not show impairment in tumour controls upon melanoma challenge. Mechanistically, increased IL-33 levels, Tregs expansion, and activation of ILC2s and M2-macrophages were observed in 6-week-old but not 2-week-old post-septic mice. Moreover, impaired IL-33 production in 2-week-old post-septic mice was associated with increased DNA methylation in lung epithelial cells. Notably, IL-33 treatment boosted the expansion of Tregs and induced immunosuppression in 2-week-old mice. Clinically, adults but not paediatric post-septic patients exhibited higher counts of Tregs and seral IL-33 levels. Conclusion and Implications: These findings demonstrate a crucial and age-dependent role for IL-33 in post-sepsis immunosuppression. Thus, a better understanding of this process may lead to differential treatments for adult and paediatric sepsis.
AB - Background and Purpose: Sepsis-surviving adult individuals commonly develop immunosuppression and increased susceptibility to secondary infections, an outcome mediated by the axis IL-33/ILC2s/M2 macrophages/Tregs. Nonetheless, the long-term immune consequences of paediatric sepsis are indeterminate. We sought to investigate the role of age in the genesis of immunosuppression following sepsis. Experimental Approach: Here, we compared the frequency of Tregs, the activation of the IL-33/ILC2s axis in M2 macrophages and the DNA methylation of epithelial lung cells from post-septic infant and adult mice. Likewise, sepsis-surviving mice were inoculated intranasally with Pseudomonas aeruginosa or by subcutaneous inoculation of the B16 melanoma cell line. Finally, blood samples from sepsis-surviving patients were collected and the concentration of IL-33 and Tregs frequency were assessed. Key Results: In contrast to 6-week-old mice, 2-week-old mice were resistant to secondary infection and did not show impairment in tumour controls upon melanoma challenge. Mechanistically, increased IL-33 levels, Tregs expansion, and activation of ILC2s and M2-macrophages were observed in 6-week-old but not 2-week-old post-septic mice. Moreover, impaired IL-33 production in 2-week-old post-septic mice was associated with increased DNA methylation in lung epithelial cells. Notably, IL-33 treatment boosted the expansion of Tregs and induced immunosuppression in 2-week-old mice. Clinically, adults but not paediatric post-septic patients exhibited higher counts of Tregs and seral IL-33 levels. Conclusion and Implications: These findings demonstrate a crucial and age-dependent role for IL-33 in post-sepsis immunosuppression. Thus, a better understanding of this process may lead to differential treatments for adult and paediatric sepsis.
UR - https://doi.org/10.1111/bph.16286
U2 - 10.1111/bph.16286
DO - 10.1111/bph.16286
M3 - Article
SN - 0007-1188
VL - 181
SP - 1308
EP - 1323
JO - British Journal of Pharmacology
JF - British Journal of Pharmacology
IS - 8
ER -