iScience (Oct 2023)

Decoding molecular signature on heart of septic mice with distinct left ventricular ejection fraction

  • Lina Zhang,
  • Desheng Qi,
  • Milin Peng,
  • Binbin Meng,
  • Xinrun Wang,
  • Xiaolei Zhang,
  • Zhihong Zuo,
  • Li Li,
  • Zhanwen Wang,
  • Wenxuan Zou,
  • Zhonghua Hu,
  • Zhaoxin Qian

Journal volume & issue
Vol. 26, no. 10
p. 107825

Abstract

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Summary: Dysregulated cardiac function after sepsis in intensive care unit is known to predict poor long-term outcome and increase mortality. Their pathological feature and molecular mechanism remain unclear. We observed that septic patients with depressed left ventricular ejection fraction (LVEF) have the highest in-hospital and 28 days mortality comparing to patients with hyperdynamic LVEF or with heart failure with preserved LVEF. Echocardiograms reveal that survivors post cecum ligation and puncture (CLP) on rodents have stable LVEF and non-survivors have fluctuated LVEF at CLP early phase. CLP-induced mice fall into three groups based on LVEF 24 h post-surgery: high-, low-, and normal-LVEF. Transcriptomic and proteomic analyses identify jointly and distinctively changed genes, proteins and biologically essential pathways in left ventricles from three CLP groups. Notably, transmission electron microscopy shows different mitochondrial and sarcomere defects associated with LVEF variances. Together, this study systematically characterizes the molecular, morphological, and functional alterations in CLP-induced cardiac injury.

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