Lethal endotoxemia, vivo, vitro |
NETs are formed in lungs during the lethal endotoxemia and that inhibition of PAD4 can abolish NET formation |
YW3–56(PAD2/PAD4 inhibitor) |
NETs can cause leakage of endothelial cells and that different NETs induce permeability to different extents and YW3–56 alleviates LPS-induced ALI, educing organ damage and raised survival rates |
PAD-NET-CitH3 pathway |
Liang et al. [77] |
Endotoxaemia, vivo |
Avast distribution of NETs was observed in the liver vasculature of endotoxemic mice. Visualization of the terminal product of coagulation, fibrin, demonstrated colocalization with NETs |
DNase I |
NETs promote intravascular coagulation during sepsis. NET-induced intravascular coagulation is a fundamental contributor to microvascular hypoperfusion in sepsis. NETs are key pathological mediators in systemic intravascular coagulation and subsequent end-organ damage in bacterial sepsis |
A dynamic NET–platelet–thrombin axis that promotes intravascular coagulation and microvascular dysfunction in sepsis |
Mcdonald et al. [75] |
CLP, vivo, vitro |
Induction of sepsis caused significant formation of NETs |
rhDNAse |
NET formation exerts proin-flammatory effects in septic lung injury |
NET activity regulates CXC, TNF-α, and HMGB1 chemokine formation |
Luo et al. [76] |
Lethal septic shock, vivo, vitro |
NETs were significantly elevated in abdominal sepsis patients and there were significant correlations between NETs markers and intestinal damage markers in serum |
ODN2088(TLR9 antagonist) |
NETs participate in sepsis-induced intestinal apoptosis. NETs impair the integrity of intestinal epithelial cell monolayer barriers in vitro |
TLR9–ER stress signaling pathway possible participate in NETs-induced intestinal epithelial cell death |
Sun et al. [78] |
trauma hemorrhagic shock, vivo |
Trauma-hemorrhagic shock induced the formation of intestinal NETs and disrupted the intestinal tight junction proteins |
DNase I |
NETs contribute to the dysfunction of the intestinal barrier in T/HS and aggregated intestinal injury |
Tranexamic acid appears to suppress NETs formation via the classic ROS/MAPK pathway |
Chu et al. [79] |
ICU patients, Ex vivo |
NETs can be directly induced by incubating neutrophils with plasma or sera from patients with sepsis |
Inhibition of IL-8 or MAPK |
Sepsis is the predominant ICU condition associated with NET formation and degrees of NET formation predict DIC development and are associated with multisystem organ failure and mortality |
MAPK activation as the major pathway of IL-8–induced NET formation in patients |
Abrams et al. [87] |
Midgut volvulus, vivo |
A significant increase in ceDNA within 4 h post midgut volvulus |
DNase1 and tPA / LMWH |
Formation NETs disrupts intestinal tissue integrity after torsion |
Diminished the inflammatory response |
Boettcher et al. [91] |
Intestinal I/R, vivo |
NETs are present in the intestine and that cfDNA is released into the blood during intestinal I/R injury |
DNase-1 |
NETs contribute to the early inflammatory response after intestinal I/R injury |
Dnase could reduce NET density, downregulate the proinflammatory response, changes and maintain the functional integrity of tight junctions and the cytoskeleton |
Wang et al. [92] |
Intestinal I/R, vivo, vitro |
Pre-ischemia, the number of NETing leukocytes was modest and postischemia NETosis was vastly enhanced in vivo. Isolated bone marrow-derived neutrophils from germ-free mice and broad-spectrum antibiotic-treated mice show hyperreactive LPS-induced NETosis |
Broad-spectrum antibiotics |
NETs mediated mesenteric I/R injury |
Tonic stimulation of the cell-intrinsic TLR4/TRIF (TIR-domain–containing adapter-inducing interferon-β) signaling pathway by gut commensals attenuates LPS-induced NETosis |
Ascher et al. [93] |
NEC, vivo, Ex vivo |
NETs presented in human NEC ileum.NET formation was abundant in the small intestine of pups in the NEC group |
Cl-amidine |
NETs are critical in the innate immune defence during NEC in preventing systemic bacteraemia. NETs inhibition increases inflammation, bacteraemia and mortality in murine necrotizing enterocolitis |
NET formation may be disease- and model-specific, and in NEC, they depend largely upon the level of intestinal bacterial translocation |
Chaaban et al. [11] |
NEC, vivo |
NEC significantly induced elevated cfDNA |
DNase1 |
NETs induced tissue damage, oxidative stress, and inflammation |
DNase1 treatment significantly reduced TLR4 and C5a receptor expression and thus interfered with the typical inflammatory cascade |
Klinke et al. [99] |