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Hypoxia determines survival outcomes of bacterial infection through HIF-1alpha dependent re-programming of leukocyte metabolism.

Authors :
Thompson AA
Dickinson RS
Murphy F
Thomson JP
Marriott HM
Tavares A
Willson J
Williams L
Lewis A
Mirchandani A
Dos Santos Coelho P
Doherty C
Ryan E
Watts E
Morton NM
Forbes S
Stimson RH
Hameed AG
Arnold N
Preston JA
Lawrie A
Finisguerra V
Mazzone M
Sadiku P
Goveia J
Taverna F
Carmeliet P
Foster SJ
Chilvers ER
Cowburn AS
Dockrell DH
Johnson RS
Meehan RR
Whyte MK
Walmsley SR
Source :
Science immunology [Sci Immunol] 2017 Feb 10; Vol. 2 (8).
Publication Year :
2017

Abstract

Hypoxia and bacterial infection frequently co-exist, in both acute and chronic clinical settings, and typically result in adverse clinical outcomes. To ameliorate this morbidity, we investigated the interaction between hypoxia and the host response. In the context of acute hypoxia, both S. aureus and S. pneumoniae infections rapidly induced progressive neutrophil mediated morbidity and mortality, with associated hypothermia and cardiovascular compromise. Preconditioning animals through longer exposures to hypoxia, prior to infection, prevented these pathophysiological responses and profoundly dampened the transcriptome of circulating leukocytes. Specifically, perturbation of HIF pathway and glycolysis genes by hypoxic preconditioning was associated with reduced leukocyte glucose utilisation, resulting in systemic rescue from a global negative energy state and myocardial protection. Thus we demonstrate that hypoxia preconditions the innate immune response and determines survival outcomes following bacterial infection through suppression of HIF-1α and neutrophil metabolism. The therapeutic implications of this work are that in the context of systemic or tissue hypoxia therapies that target the host response could improve infection associated morbidity and mortality.<br />Competing Interests: Competing Financial Interests The authors declare no competing financial interests.

Details

Language :
English
ISSN :
2470-9468
Volume :
2
Issue :
8
Database :
MEDLINE
Journal :
Science immunology
Publication Type :
Academic Journal
Accession number :
28386604
Full Text :
https://doi.org/10.1126/sciimmunol.aal2861