Abstract

Sepsis still causes death, often through cardiac failure and mitochondrial dysfunction. Dietary ω3 polyunsaturated fatty acids are known to protect against cardiac dysfunction and sepsis lethality. This study set out to determine whether early low-severity sepsis alters the cardiac mitochondrial function in animals fed a Western-type diet and whether dietary eicosapentaenoic acid (EPA) administration protects the myocardium against the deleterious effects of sepsis and if so to seek possible mechanisms for its effects. Rats were divided into two groups fed either an ω3 PUFA-deficient diet (“Western diet,” DEF group) or an EPA-enriched diet (EPA group) for 5 weeks. Each group was subdivided into two subgroups: sham-operated rats and rats subjected to cecal ligation and puncture (CLP). In vivo cardiac mechanical function was examined, and mitochondria were harvested to determine their functional activity. Oxidative stress was evaluated together with several factors involved in the regulation of reactive oxygen species metabolism. Sepsis had little effect on cardiac mechanical function but strongly depressed mitochondrial function in the DEF group. Conversely, dietary EPA greatly protected the mitochondria through a decreased oxidative stress of the mitochondrial matrix. The latter was probably due to an increased uncoupling protein-3 expression, already seen in the sham-operated animals. CLP rats in the EPA group also displayed increased mitochondrial sirtuin-3 protein expression that could reinforce the upholding of oxidative phosphorylation. Dietary EPA preconditioned the heart against septic damage through several modifications that protect mitochondrial integrity. This preconditioning can explain the cardioprotective effect of dietary EPA during sepsis.

Highlights

  • Sepsis, due to bacterial contamination, affects 30 million people every year and is a leading cause of lethality worldwide, with some 6 million annual deaths [1]

  • This study set out to (i) determine whether the function of cardiac mitochondria is prematurely modified—before the occurrence of contractile dysfunctions—in early lowseverity sepsis induced by cecal ligation and puncture in rats fed a Western diet, (ii) find out whether dietary eicosapentaenoic acid (C20:5 n-3 or EPA) protects the integrity of these organelles, and (iii) seek a potential mechanism responsible for observed effects

  • The fatty acid composition of membrane phospholipids plays a crucial role in the regulation of cardiac and mitochondrial function because of its involvement in prostanoid synthesis and its engagement in the modulation of enzymatic activities through changes in membrane fluidity

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Summary

Introduction

Due to bacterial contamination, affects 30 million people every year and is a leading cause of lethality worldwide, with some 6 million annual deaths [1]. Sepsis is very frequent in industrialized countries and is a cost burden on their healthcare systems when it evolves toward septic shock [2]. In 2010, approximately 15% of French patients diagnosed with sepsis developed septic shock, and even though the incidence of mortality has gradually decreased with new therapeutic advances, it remains high, with a rate of 39.5% [4]. Except for a stimulation of the heart rate occurring in the early phase of sepsis [6], changes in cardiac mechanical function are detected only in the sickest patients using the most recent techniques (echography, MRI): they are first characterized by an impaired diastolic function, which evolves toward a reduced systolic function in the most severe cases [7, 8]

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