Abstract

Simple SummarySepsis is a disease affecting 19 million people worldwide, and accounts for 5 million deaths annually. Efforts in finding predictive markers of sepsis development have been difficult due to the complex clinical features of the disease. Public data repositories are valuable resources for mining gene expression changes across different studies. Using such resources, we observed a consistent increase in ERLIN1—a gene coding for an ER membrane prohibitin and regulator of cholesterol—in whole blood, and across a variety of immune cells, during sepsis or sepsis-like conditions. We verified this finding by exposing the whole blood of healthy volunteers to a combination of lipopolysaccharide and peptidoglycan in order to simulate sepsis. We observed an increase in ERLIN1 in whole-blood neutrophils and HL60 cell lines during sepsis; however, the protein was expressed differently in other immune blood cells. The current available studies on ERLIN1 and sepsis indicate a knowledge gap between the functions of ERLIN1, calcium balance, and cholesterol and fatty acid synthesis, and sepsis. Together with experimental data, we think that ERLIN1 is modulated differently in immune cells in response to infection, and has important implications for ER functions and/or ER membrane protein components during sepsis.Sepsis results from the dysregulation of the host immune system. This highly variable disease affects 19 million people globally, and accounts for 5 million deaths annually. In transcriptomic datasets curated from public repositories, we observed a consistent upregulation (3.26–5.29 fold) of ERLIN1—a gene coding for an ER membrane prohibitin and a regulator of inositol 1, 4, 5-trisphosphate receptors and sterol regulatory element-binding proteins—under septic conditions in healthy neutrophils, monocytes, and whole blood. In vitro expression of the ERLIN1 gene and proteins was measured by stimulating the whole blood of healthy volunteers to a combination of lipopolysaccharide and peptidoglycan. Septic stimulation induced a significant increase in ERLIN1 expression; however, ERLIN1 was differentially expressed among the immune blood cell subsets. ERLIN1 was uniquely increased in whole blood neutrophils, and confirmed in the differentiated HL60 cell line. The scarcity of ERLIN1 in sepsis literature indicates a knowledge gap between the functions of ERLIN1, calcium homeostasis, and cholesterol and fatty acid biosynthesis, and sepsis. In combination with experimental data, we bring forth the hypothesis that ERLIN1 is variably modulated among immune cells in response to cellular perturbations, and has implications for ER functions and/or ER membrane protein components during sepsis.

Highlights

  • Sepsis affects 19 million patients worldwide, with a mortality rate between 25% and30%, rising to 50% when shock is present [1]

  • Similar increases in ERLIN1 expression in sepsis were observed in other transcriptome datasets obtained from whole blood (n = 8) and isolated cell (n = 8) samples, and generated from in vivo (n = 5), ex vivo (n = 1), and in vitro (n = 8) experimental designs (Table 1)

  • The induction of ERLIN1 was seen in both adult and neonate septic cohorts infected by multiple pathogens

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Summary

Introduction

Sepsis affects 19 million patients worldwide, with a mortality rate between 25% and30%, rising to 50% when shock is present [1]. Sepsis affects 19 million patients worldwide, with a mortality rate between 25% and. Palliative care and antimicrobial treatment have improved sepsis management, the mortality rate remains high due to disease heterogeneity, highly variable host characteristics (e.g., cardiovascular, immunological, etc.), and shortcomings in early detection and diagnosis [4,5]. Sepsis develops as a result of the dysregulation of innate immune responses, leading to a systemic infection [6,7]. Whilst few studies have proposed biomarker signatures for identifying patients at risk of developing sepsis prior to the manifestation of symptoms [8,9], others have identified genetic variations that increase the risk of infection or immune dysregulation, leading to the identification of several “primary immune deficiency” diseases [10,11]

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