Frontiers in Immunology (Jan 2019)

Source of Circulating Pentraxin 3 in Septic Shock Patients

  • Chloé Albert Vega,
  • Chloé Albert Vega,
  • Marine Mommert,
  • Marine Mommert,
  • Mathilde Boccard,
  • Mathilde Boccard,
  • Thomas Rimmelé,
  • Thomas Rimmelé,
  • Fabienne Venet,
  • Fabienne Venet,
  • Alexandre Pachot,
  • Veronique Leray,
  • Guillaume Monneret,
  • Guillaume Monneret,
  • Benjamin Delwarde,
  • Karen Brengel-Pesce,
  • Karen Brengel-Pesce,
  • François Mallet,
  • François Mallet,
  • François Mallet,
  • Sophie Trouillet-Assant,
  • Sophie Trouillet-Assant

DOI
https://doi.org/10.3389/fimmu.2018.03048
Journal volume & issue
Vol. 9

Abstract

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Sepsis, which is the leading cause of death in intensive care units (ICU), has been acknowledged as a global health priority by the WHO in 2017. Identification of biomarkers allowing early stratification and recognition of patients at higher risk of death is crucial. One promising biomarker candidate is pentraxin-3 (PTX3); initially elevated and persistently increased plasma concentration in septic patients has been associated with increased mortality. PTX3 is an acute phase protein mainly stored in neutrophil granules. These cells are responsible for rapid and prompt release of PTX3 in inflammatory context, but the cellular origin responsible for successive days' elevation in sepsis remains unknown. Upon inflammatory stimulation, PTX3 can also be produced by other cell types, including endothelial and immune cells. As in septic patients immune alterations have been described, we therefore sought to investigate whether such cells participated in the elevation of PTX3 over the first days after septic shock onset. To address this point, PTX3 was measured in plasma from septic shock patients at day 3 after ICU admission as well as in healthy volunteers (HV), and the capacity of whole blood cells to secrete PTX3 after inflammatory stimulation was evaluated ex vivo. A significantly mean higher (100-fold) concentration of plasma PTX3 was found in patients compared to HV, which was likely due to the inflammation-induced initial release of the pre-existing PTX3 reservoir contained in neutrophils. Strikingly, when whole blood was stimulated ex vivo with LPS no significant difference between patients and HV in PTX3 release was found. This was in contrast with TNFα which decreased production was illustrative of the endotoxin tolerance phenomenon occurring in septic patients. Then, the release of PTX3 protein from a HV neutrophil-free PBMC endotoxin tolerance model was investigated. At the transcriptional level, PTX3 seems to be a weakly tolerizable gene similar to TNFα. Conversely, increased protein levels observed in anergy condition reflects a non-tolerizable phenotype, more likely to an anti-inflammatory marker. Hence, altered immune cells still have the ability to produce PTX3 in response to an inflammatory trigger, and therefore circulating white blood cell subset could be responsible of the sustained PTX3 plasma levels over the first days of sepsis setting.

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