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      Soluble ST2 plasma concentrations predict mortality in severe sepsis

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          Abstract

          Purpose

          Patients with sepsis—after surviving the initial hyperinflammatory phase—display features consistent with immunosuppression, including hyporesponsiveness of immunocompetent cells to bacterial agents. Immunosuppression is thought to be facilitated by negative regulators of toll-like receptors, including membrane-bound ST2. We investigated the release of soluble ST2 (sST2), a decoy receptor that inhibits membrane-bound ST2 signaling, during sepsis.

          Methods

          The study population comprised 95 patients with severe sepsis admitted to one of two intensive care units (ICUs) at the day the diagnosis of severe sepsis was made. Blood was obtained daily from admission (day 0) until day 7 and finally at day 14. Twenty-four healthy subjects served as controls. sST2 and cytokines were measured in serum.

          Results

          Mortality among patients was 34% in the ICU and 45% in the hospital. On admission, sepsis patients had higher sST2 levels [10,989 (7,871–15,342) pg/ml, geometric mean (95% confidence interval, CI)] than controls [55 (20–145) pg/ml, P < 0.0001]. Serum sST2 remained elevated in patients from day 0 to 14 and correlated with disease severity scores ( P < 0.001) and cytokine levels on day 0 and during course of disease ( P < 0.0001). Nonsurvivors displayed elevated sST2 levels compared with survivors of the intensive care unit ( P < 0.0001).

          Conclusions

          Sepsis results in sustained elevation of serum sST2 levels, which correlates with disease severity and mortality.

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          Most cited references22

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          IL-33 and ST2 comprise a critical biomechanically induced and cardioprotective signaling system.

          ST2 is an IL-1 receptor family member with transmembrane (ST2L) and soluble (sST2) isoforms. sST2 is a mechanically induced cardiomyocyte protein, and serum sST2 levels predict outcome in patients with acute myocardial infarction or chronic heart failure. Recently, IL-33 was identified as a functional ligand of ST2L, allowing exploration of the role of ST2 in myocardium. We found that IL-33 was a biomechanically induced protein predominantly synthesized by cardiac fibroblasts. IL-33 markedly antagonized angiotensin II- and phenylephrine-induced cardiomyocyte hypertrophy. Although IL-33 activated NF-kappaB, it inhibited angiotensin II- and phenylephrine-induced phosphorylation of inhibitor of NF-kappa B alpha (I kappa B alpha) and NF-kappaB nuclear binding activity. sST2 blocked antihypertrophic effects of IL-33, indicating that sST2 functions in myocardium as a soluble decoy receptor. Following pressure overload by transverse aortic constriction (TAC), ST2(-/-) mice had more left ventricular hypertrophy, more chamber dilation, reduced fractional shortening, more fibrosis, and impaired survival compared with WT littermates. Furthermore, recombinant IL-33 treatment reduced hypertrophy and fibrosis and improved survival after TAC in WT mice, but not in ST2(-/-) littermates. Thus, IL-33/ST2 signaling is a mechanically activated, cardioprotective fibroblast-cardiomyocyte paracrine system, which we believe to be novel. IL-33 may have therapeutic potential for beneficially regulating the myocardial response to overload.
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            Expression and regulation of ST2, an interleukin-1 receptor family member, in cardiomyocytes and myocardial infarction.

            We identified an interleukin-1 receptor family member, ST2, as a gene markedly induced by mechanical strain in cardiac myocytes and hypothesized that ST2 participates in the acute myocardial response to stress and injury. ST2 mRNA was induced in cardiac myocytes by mechanical strain (4.7+/-0.9-fold) and interleukin-1beta (2.0+/-0.2-fold). Promoter analysis revealed that the proximal and not the distal promoter of ST2 is responsible for transcriptional activation in cardiac myocytes by strain and interleukin-1beta. In mice subjected to coronary artery ligation, serum ST2 was transiently increased compared with unoperated controls (20.8+/-4.4 versus 0.8+/-0.8 ng/mL, P<0.05). Soluble ST2 levels were increased in the serum of human patients (N=69) 1 day after myocardial infarction and correlated positively with creatine kinase (r=0.41, P<0.001) and negatively with ejection fraction (P=0.02). These data identify ST2 release in response to myocardial infarction and suggest a role for this innate immune receptor in myocardial injury.
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              Genetic analysis of host resistance: Toll-like receptor signaling and immunity at large.

              Classical genetic methods, driven by phenotype rather than hypotheses, generally permit the identification of all proteins that serve nonredundant functions in a defined biological process. Long before this goal is achieved, and sometimes at the very outset, genetics may cut to the heart of a biological puzzle. So it was in the field of mammalian innate immunity. The positional cloning of a spontaneous mutation that caused lipopolysaccharide resistance and susceptibility to Gram-negative infection led directly to the understanding that Toll-like receptors (TLRs) are essential sensors of microbial infection. Other mutations, induced by the random germ line mutagen ENU (N-ethyl-N-nitrosourea), have disclosed key molecules in the TLR signaling pathways and helped us to construct a reasonably sophisticated portrait of the afferent innate immune response. A still broader genetic screen--one that detects all mutations that compromise survival during infection--is permitting fresh insight into the number and types of proteins that mammals use to defend themselves against microbes.
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                Author and article information

                Contributors
                +31-20-5669111 , +31-20-6977192 , j.j.hoogerwerf@amc.uva.nl
                Journal
                Intensive Care Med
                Intensive Care Medicine
                Springer-Verlag (Berlin/Heidelberg )
                0342-4642
                1432-1238
                12 February 2010
                12 February 2010
                April 2010
                : 36
                : 4
                : 630-637
                Affiliations
                [1 ]Center for Infection and Immunity Amsterdam (CINIMA), University of Amsterdam, Amsterdam, The Netherlands
                [2 ]Center of Experimental and Molecular Medicine, University of Amsterdam, Meibergdreef 9, Room G2-132, 1105 AZ Amsterdam, The Netherlands
                [3 ]Department of Clinical Epidemiology, Biostatistics and Bioinformatics, Academic Medical Center, University of Amsterdam, Amsterdam, The Netherlands
                [4 ]Department of Intensive Care and Emergency Medicine, St. Luc University Hospital, UCL, Brussels, Belgium
                Article
                1773
                10.1007/s00134-010-1773-0
                2837188
                20151106
                1804652a-f520-4fbc-97e3-095cace8ad47
                © The Author(s) 2010
                History
                : 28 August 2008
                : 3 November 2009
                Categories
                Original
                Custom metadata
                © Copyright jointly held by Springer and ESICM 2010

                Emergency medicine & Trauma
                st2,cytokines,sepsis,innate immune response
                Emergency medicine & Trauma
                st2, cytokines, sepsis, innate immune response

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