Abstract

Burn injuries together with its subsequent complications, mainly bacterial infections originating from gastrointestinal tract, activate the host immune system through stimulation of a series of local and systemic responses, including the release of inflammatory mediators. To gain a more comprehensive understanding of these complex physiological changes and to propose therapeutic approaches to combat the deleterious consequences of burn and septic shocks, it is essential to analyze animal models of burn and sepsis. In this study, we analyzed the long term profiles of cytokines and chemokines in rat models which received burn injury followed 2 days later by cecal ligation and puncture (CLP) to induce sepsis and were sacrificed at different time points within 10days (0, 1, 2, 3, 4, 7 and 10days). It was observed that MCP-1 concentrations were elevated in all animal models following the burn injury or CLP treatment. IP-10 concentration was persistently decreased after CLP or sham-CLP treatments. GRO/KC concentration was also increased following the burn injury and CLP. It was elucidated that, in more severe injury model which received both burn and CLP treatments, GMCSF and MIP-1α (chemokines), IL-1α (a pro-inflammatory cytokine) and IL-6 (exhibiting both pro- and anti-inflammatory behaviors) were upregulated on the 7th and 10th days, which might be to protect the host system from the subsequent complications caused by burn and sepsis. In order to elucidate critical regulatory interactions, putative transcription factors of the inflammatory mediators which have been significantly changed following the injuries were further identified by analyzing the conserved regions of the promoters of cytokines and chemokines. In conclusion, the long term profiles of the inflammatory mediators were profoundly characterized in this study to gain a comprehensive understanding of inflammatory mediators’ behaviors in various injury models.

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