Immune Dysfunction: An Update of New Immune Cell Subsets and Cytokines in Sepsis

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Until recently, necrosis is generally regarded as traumatic cell death due to mechanical shear stress or other physicochemical factors, while apoptosis is commonly thought to be programmed cell death, which is silent to immunological response. Actually, multiple modalities of cell death are programmed to maintain systematic immunity. Programmed necrosis, such as necrosis, pyroptosis, and ferroptosis, are inherently more immunogenic than apoptosis. Programmed necrosis leads to the release of inflammatory cytokines, defined as danger-associated molecular patterns (DAMPs), resulting in a necroinflammatory response, which can drive the proinflammatory state under certain biological circumstances. Ferroptosis as a newly discovered non-apoptotic form of cell death, is characterized by excessive lipid peroxidation and overload iron, which occurs in cancer, neurodegeneration, immune and inflammatory diseases, as well as ischemia/reperfusion (I/R) injury. It is triggered by a surplus of reactive oxygen species (ROS) induced in an imbalanced redox reaction due to the decrease in glutathione synthesis and inaction of enzyme glutathione peroxidase 4 (GPX4). Ferroptosis is considered as a potential therapeutic and molecular target for the treatment of necroinflammatory disease, and further investigation into the underlying pathophysiological characteristics and molecular mechanisms implicated may lay the foundations for an interventional therapeutic strategy. This review aims to demonstrate the key roles of ferroptosis in the development of necroinflammatory diseases, the major regulatory mechanisms involved, and its potential as a therapeutic target.

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Cells depicted are from all subjects in the study, in each corresponding group (sepsis n=4, healthy n=5). Using Seurat’s method of integrating data across conditions/batches, the integration allows for joint clustering and to identify shared (or possibly unshared) cell clusters. Cells are visualized on uniform manifold approximation and projection (UMAP) plots colored by cell types. (A) UMAP representation of cell clusters identified in healthy patients versus late sepsis. (B) Annotation of T-lymphocyte subsets was performed manually using expression of CD3D, CD4, CD8A, CCL5, CCR7, FOXP3, GNLY, IL2RA, IL7R, NCAM1 and NKG7. (C) UMAP representation of T-cell subset clusters from manual annotation identified in healthy patients versus late sepsis in three dimensions. (E-MDSC, early myeloid derived suppressor cell; G-MDSC, granulocytic myeloid derived suppressor cell; M-MDSC, monocytic myeloid derived suppressor cell; pDC, plasmacytoid dendritic cells).
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Mini Review
16 March 2021
Inflammasome-Dependent Coagulation Activation in Sepsis
Runliu Wu
3 more and 
Rui Kang
Role of inflammasome in sepsis-induced coagulation. Canonical and non-canonical inflammasome complexes in myeloid cells are assembled when pattern recognition receptors (PRRs) sense pathogen-associated molecular patterns (PAMPs), damage-associated molecular patterns (DAMPs), altered cellular homeostasis or endogenous danger signals caused by infection during sepsis. Functional inflammasome activates caspase-1 (CASP1), caspase-11 (CASP11) or caspase-8 (CASP8) to cleave gasdermin D (GSDMD) to produce N-terminal fragments (GSDMD-N). GSDMD-N forms pores on the plasma membrane, resulting in cell membrane rupture and pyroptosis or rendering cells into hyperactivation state. Coagulation factor III (F3) released from ruptured membrane promotes blood clotting. Elevated Ca2+ influx from extracellular space through GSDMD-N-formed pores in hyperactivation state promotes phosphatidylserine (PS) exposure, thereby enhancing the pro-coagulant activity of F3. Type I interferons (IFNs) mediates release of hepatocyte high mobility group box 1 (HMGB1), which facilitates LPS entering cytosol. Stimulator of interferon response cGAMP interactor 1 (STING1) senses infection-induced DNA damage and mediates CASP1/11/8 activation. Inhibition of inflammasome activation and subsequent pyroptosis prevents sepsis-induced coagulation.

Sepsis is a potentially life-threatening, pathological condition caused by a dysregulated host response to infection. Pathologically, systemic inflammation can initiate coagulation activation, leading to organ dysfunction, and ultimately to multiple organ failure and septic death. The inflammasomes are cytosolic multiprotein signaling complexes that control the host response to diverse pathogen-associated molecular patterns (PAMPs) from microorganisms as well as damage-associated molecular patterns (DAMPs) from dead or dying host cells. Recent studies highlight that the activation of canonical and non-canonical inflammasomes not only mediate the maturation and secretion of interleukin-1 (IL1) family cytokines, but also trigger the release of coagulation factor III, tissue factor (F3, best known as TF) in activated macrophages and monocytes. These emerging functions of inflammasomes in immunocoagulation are further positively regulated by stimulator of interferon response cGAMP interactor 1 (STING1, also known as STING or TMEM173, a hub of the innate immune signaling network) and high mobility group box 1 (HMGB1, a nuclear DAMP). This mini-review will discuss the regulation and function of inflammasome-dependent coagulation activation in sepsis.

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