Metabolic Adaptation Establishes Disease Tolerance to Sepsis
Author(s) -
Sebastian Weis,
Ana Rita Carlos,
Maria Raquel Moita,
Sumnima Singh,
Birte Blankenhaus,
Sílvia Cardoso,
Rasmus Larsen,
Sofia Rebelo,
Sascha Schäuble,
Laura del Barrio,
Gilles Mithieux,
Fabienne Rajas,
Sandro Lindig,
Michael Bauer,
Miguel P. Soares
Publication year - 2017
Publication title -
cell
Language(s) - English
Resource type - Journals
SCImago Journal Rank - 26.304
H-Index - 776
eISSN - 1097-4172
pISSN - 0092-8674
DOI - 10.1016/j.cell.2017.05.031
Subject(s) - biology , sepsis , disease , immunology , immune system , homeostasis , ferritin , gluconeogenesis , glucose 6 phosphatase , hypoglycemia , metabolism , endocrinology , medicine , biochemistry , diabetes mellitus , enzyme
Sepsis is an often lethal syndrome resulting from maladaptive immune and metabolic responses to infection, compromising host homeostasis. Disease tolerance is a defense strategy against infection that preserves host homeostasis without exerting a direct negative impact on pathogens. Here, we demonstrate that induction of the iron-sequestering ferritin H chain (FTH) in response to polymicrobial infections is critical to establish disease tolerance to sepsis. The protective effect of FTH is exerted via a mechanism that counters iron-driven oxidative inhibition of the liver glucose-6-phosphatase (G6Pase), and in doing so, sustains endogenous glucose production via liver gluconeogenesis. This is required to prevent the development of hypoglycemia that otherwise compromises disease tolerance to sepsis. FTH overexpression or ferritin administration establish disease tolerance therapeutically. In conclusion, disease tolerance to sepsis relies on a crosstalk between adaptive responses controlling iron and glucose metabolism, required to maintain blood glucose within a physiologic range compatible with host survival.
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