Abstract

BackgroundSevere sepsis and septic shock are major causes of morbidity and mortality worldwide. In experimental sepsis there is prominent apoptosis of various cell types, and genetic manipulation of death and survival pathways has been shown to modulate organ injury and survival.Methodology/Principal FindingsWe investigated the effect of extracellular administration of two anti-apoptotic members of the BCL2 (B-cell lymphoma 2) family of intracellular regulators of cell death in a murine model of sepsis induced by cecal ligation and puncture (CLP). We show that intraperitoneal injection of picomole range doses of recombinant human (rh) BCL2 or rhBCL2A1 protein markedly improved survival as assessed by surrogate markers of death. Treatment with rhBCL2 or rhBCL2A1 protein significantly reduced the number of apoptotic cells in the intestine and heart following CLP, and this was accompanied by increased expression of endogenous mouse BCL2 protein. Further, mice treated with rhBCL2A1 protein showed an increase in the total number of neutrophils in the peritoneum following CLP with reduced neutrophil apoptosis. Finally, although neither BCL2 nor BCL2A1 are a direct TLR2 ligand, TLR2-null mice were not protected by rhBCL2A1 protein, indicating that TLR2 signaling was required for the protective activity of extracellularly adminsitered BCL2A1 protein in vivo.Conclusions/SignificanceTreatment with rhBCL2A1 or rhBCL2 protein protects mice from sepsis by reducing apoptosis in multiple target tissues, demonstrating an unexpected, potent activity of extracellularly administered BCL2 BH4-domain proteins.

Highlights

  • Severe sepsis and its major complications of multiple organ dysfunction and shock are major causes of morbidity and mortality worldwide

  • There is compelling experimental evidence that apoptosis is a major contributor to the multiple organ dysfunction in experimental sepsis [5]

  • In a recent study we showed that extracellular administration of rhBCL2 or rhBCL2A1 protein provided protection in murine models of hind limb and cardiac ischemia [26]

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Summary

Introduction

Severe sepsis and its major complications of multiple organ dysfunction and shock are major causes of morbidity and mortality worldwide. Genetic manipulation of cell death and survival pathways has marked effects in murine models of sepsis (e.g., [12]). These observations suggest that pharmacological inhibition of apoptosis by blocking cell death pathways or promoting cell survival pathways could provide a new therapeutic approach to sepsis in man [5]. Severe sepsis and septic shock are major causes of morbidity and mortality worldwide. In experimental sepsis there is prominent apoptosis of various cell types, and genetic manipulation of death and survival pathways has been shown to modulate organ injury and survival

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