
Mice Survival and Plasmatic Cytokine Secretion in a “Two Hit” Model of Sepsis Depend on Intratracheal Pseudomonas Aeruginosa Bacterial Load
Author(s) -
Damien Restagno,
Fabienne Venet,
Christian Paquet,
Ludovic Freyburger,
Bernard Allaouchiche,
Guillaume Monneret,
JeanneMarie Bonnet,
Vanessa Louzier
Publication year - 2016
Publication title -
plos one
Language(s) - English
Resource type - Journals
SCImago Journal Rank - 0.99
H-Index - 332
ISSN - 1932-6203
DOI - 10.1371/journal.pone.0162109
Subject(s) - splenocyte , spleen , pseudomonas aeruginosa , sepsis , cytokine , immunology , interleukin 10 , microbiology and biotechnology , tumor necrosis factor alpha , population , medicine , proinflammatory cytokine , pneumonia , immunosuppression , inflammation , biology , bacteria , environmental health , genetics
Sepsis is characterized by pro- and anti-inflammatory responses following infection. While inflammation is responsible for widespread organ damage, anti-inflammatory mediators lead to immunoparalysis increasing susceptibility to secondary infections (nosocomial pneumonia). We aimed to investigate the impact of bacterial load on survival and cytokine release in a two-hit murine (C57BL/6J) model of CLP followed by P . aeruginosa pneumonia. Plasmatic TNFα, IL-6, IL-10, sTNFr I and II were quantified until 13 days. At D5, splenocytes were processed for immunological assays or mice were intratracheally instilled with Pseudomonas aeruginosa (5.10 6 , 2.10 7 and 10 8 CFU) to evaluate survival and cytokines production. TNFα, sTNFrs, IL-6 and IL-10 increased 2h post CLP. TNFα and sTNFrs declined respectively one and two days later. In CLP mice, IL-6 and IL-10 remained high for the whole experiment, as compared to Sham. At D5, for CLP mice, whereas total T cells population (CD3+) decreased, Treg fraction (CD4+/CD25+) increased. In parallel, T cells proliferation and LPS-stimulated splenocytes ability to release TNFα decreased. At D13, survival was 100% after 5.10 6 CFU, 50% for CLP mice after 2.10 7 CFU and 0% for CLP and Sham after 10 8 CFU. After instillation, IL-10 and IL-6 increased and appeared to be dose and time dependent. Pseudomonas was detected in all CLP and Sham’s lungs; in spleen and liver only in CLP at 2.10 7 CFU, and in CLP and Sham at 10 8 CFU. We demonstrated that post-CLP immunosuppression followed by Pseudomonas aeruginosa lung instillation increases mortality reactivates cytokines secretion and is associated with systemic dissemination in septic mice depending on bacterial load.