International Journal of Molecular Sciences (Nov 2023)

Comparison of Transcriptomic Changes in Survivors of Exertional Heat Illness with Malignant Hyperthermia Susceptible Patients

  • Leon Chang,
  • Lois Gardner,
  • Carol House,
  • Catherine Daly,
  • Adrian Allsopp,
  • Daniel Roiz de Sa,
  • Marie-Anne Shaw,
  • Philip M. Hopkins

DOI
https://doi.org/10.3390/ijms242216124
Journal volume & issue
Vol. 24, no. 22
p. 16124

Abstract

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Exertional heat illness (EHI) is an occupational health hazard for athletes and military personnel–characterised by the inability to thermoregulate during exercise. The ability to thermoregulate can be studied using a standardised heat tolerance test (HTT) developed by The Institute of Naval Medicine. In this study, we investigated whole blood gene expression (at baseline, 2 h post-HTT and 24 h post-HTT) in male subjects with either a history of EHI or known susceptibility to malignant hyperthermia (MHS): a pharmacogenetic condition with similar clinical phenotype. Compared to healthy controls at baseline, 291 genes were differentially expressed in the EHI cohort, with functional enrichment in inflammatory response genes (up to a four-fold increase). In contrast, the MHS cohort featured 1019 differentially expressed genes with significant down-regulation of genes associated with oxidative phosphorylation (OXPHOS). A number of differentially expressed genes in the inflammation and OXPHOS pathways overlapped between the EHI and MHS subjects, indicating a common underlying pathophysiology. Transcriptome profiles between subjects who passed and failed the HTT (based on whether they achieved a plateau in core temperature or not, respectively) were not discernable at baseline, and HTT was shown to elevate inflammatory response gene expression across all clinical phenotypes.

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