Renal mitochondria response to sepsis: a sequential biopsy evaluation of experimental porcine model.

IF 2.8 Q2 CRITICAL CARE MEDICINE Intensive Care Medicine Experimental Pub Date : 2025-02-22 DOI:10.1186/s40635-025-00732-0
Jiri Müller, Jiri Chvojka, Lenka Ledvinova, Jan Benes, Zdenek Tuma, Martina Grundmanova, Jan Jedlicka, Jitka Kuncova, Martin Matejovic
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引用次数: 0

Abstract

Background: The pathophysiology of sepsis-induced acute kidney injury remains elusive. Although mitochondrial dysfunction is often perceived as the main culprit, data from preclinical models yielded conflicting results so far. The aim of this study was to assess the immune-metabolic background of sepsis-associated renal dysfunction using sequential biopsy approach with mitochondria function evaluation in a large clinically relevant porcine models mimicking two different paces and severity of sepsis and couple this approach with traditional parameters of renal physiology.

Methods: In this randomized, open-label study, 15 anaesthetized, mechanically ventilated and instrumented (renal artery flow probe and renal vein catheter) pigs were randomized in two disease severity groups-low severity (LS) sepsis (0.5 g/kg of autologous faeces intraperitoneally) and high severity (HS) sepsis (1 g/kg of autologous faeces intraperitoneally). Sequential cortical biopsies of the left kidney were performed and a pyramid-shaped kidney specimen with cortex, medulla and renal papilla was resected and processed at the end of the experiment. Oxygraphic data and western blot analysis of proteins involved in mitochondrial biogenesis and degradation were obtained.

Results: In contrast to increased mitochondrial activity observed in LS sepsis, a significant decrease in the oxidative phosphorylation capacity together with an increase in the respiratory system uncoupling was observed during the first 24 h after sepsis induction in the HS group. Those changes preceded alterations of renal haemodynamics. Furthermore, serum creatinine rose significantly during the first 24 h, indicating that renal dysfunction is not primarily driven by haemodynamic changes. Compared to cortex, renal medulla had significantly lower oxidative phosphorylation capacity and electron-transport system activity. PGC-1-alfa, a marker of mitochondrial biogenesis, was significantly decreased in HS group.

Conclusions: In this experimental model, unique sequential tissue data show that the nature and dynamics of renal mitochondrial responses to sepsis are profoundly determined by the severity of infectious challenge and resulting magnitude of inflammatory insult. High disease severity is associated with early and stepwise progression of mitochondria dysfunction and acute kidney injury, both occurring independently from later renal macro-haemodynamic alterations. Our data may help explain the conflicting results of preclinical studies and suggest that sepsis encompasses a very broad spectrum of sepsis-induced acute kidney injury endotypes.

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来源期刊
Intensive Care Medicine Experimental
Intensive Care Medicine Experimental CRITICAL CARE MEDICINE-
CiteScore
5.10
自引率
2.90%
发文量
48
审稿时长
13 weeks
期刊最新文献
Unlocking opportunities to transform patient care: an expert insight on limitations and opportunities in patient monitoring. Renal mitochondria response to sepsis: a sequential biopsy evaluation of experimental porcine model. Comparison of artificial intelligence and logistic regression models for mortality prediction in acute respiratory distress syndrome: a systematic review and meta-analysis. Early sepsis recognition: a pilot study using a rapid high-multiplex host-response mRNA diagnostic test. Teicoplanin pharmacokinetics in critically ill patients on extracorporeal organ support: a retrospective analysis.
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