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[Preprint]. 2023 Feb 2:2023.01.30.526342. [Version 1] doi: 10.1101/2023.01.30.526342

Organism-Wide Analysis of Sepsis Reveals Mechanisms of Systemic Inflammation

Michihiro Takahama, Ashwini Patil, Katherine Johnson, Denis Cipurko, Yoshimi Miki, Yoshitaka Taketomi, Peter Carbonetto, Madison Plaster, Gabriella Richey, Surya Pandey, Katerina Cheronis, Tatsuki Ueda, Adam Gruenbaum, Steven M Dudek, Matthew Stephens, Makoto Murakami, Nicolas Chevrier
PMCID: PMC9915512  PMID: 36778287

SUMMARY

Sepsis is a systemic response to infection with life-threatening consequences. Our understanding of the impact of sepsis across organs of the body is rudimentary. Here, using mouse models of sepsis, we generate a dynamic, organism-wide map of the pathogenesis of the disease, revealing the spatiotemporal patterns of the effects of sepsis across tissues. These data revealed two interorgan mechanisms key in sepsis. First, we discover a simplifying principle in the systemic behavior of the cytokine network during sepsis, whereby a hierarchical cytokine circuit arising from the pairwise effects of TNF plus IL-18, IFN-γ, or IL-1β explains half of all the cellular effects of sepsis on 195 cell types across 9 organs. Second, we find that the secreted phospholipase PLA2G5 mediates hemolysis in blood, contributing to organ failure during sepsis. These results provide fundamental insights to help build a unifying mechanistic framework for the pathophysiological effects of sepsis on the body.

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