Charles de Roquetaillade, Manon Durand, Victor Beaucoté, Jérémie Guillemin, Christos Evangelos Chadjichristos, Antoine Roquilly, Benjamin Glenn Chousterman
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引用次数: 0
摘要
摘要:败血症是一种危及生命的疾病,每年约有 4,900 万人受到影响,1,100 万人因此死亡。在过去的几十年中,败血症的短期死亡率已大幅下降,目前仍在不断改善。除了短期致死率,人们对败血症长期后果的认识也在不断提高。在败血症影响的所有器官中,肾脏是最脆弱的。高达 40% 的败血症患者会出现急性肾损伤(AKI),而败血症是导致急性肾损伤的主要原因。半数患者会在住院期间从急性肾损伤中恢复过来,但有几项研究指出,这些患者罹患慢性肾病(CKD)的风险会增加。研究发现,在一过性 AKI 患者中,第二次损伤会加速肾脏纤维化。总之,这些研究结果对整体恢复的概念提出了挑战,并有力地说明了适应性缺氧性心脏病的不良修复,以及器官内部深刻而持久的改变。脓毒症后诱发 AKI 到 CKD 的因素尚不清楚,可能有多种来源。肾脏巨噬细胞在健康和疾病中具有多重作用。脓毒症发生后,一部分肾脏巨噬细胞会进行 "利他主义 "的热凋亡,以招募炎症细胞。随后,在一个被称为紧急骨髓造血的过程中,来自骨髓的循环单核细胞以及常驻细胞的扩增会将空位定植。单核细胞和巨噬细胞在败血症急性期的作用已得到很好的描述,但它们在炎症缓解期的作用才刚刚开始被人们了解。在本综述中,我们将讨论脓毒症急性肾脏损伤中肾脏常驻巨噬细胞和招募的单核细胞的命运。我们将回顾将脓毒症后免疫环境的变化与不良修复联系起来的证据。最后,我们将探讨针对巨噬细胞的招募和极化如何影响脓毒症的长期后果。
Progression of Kidney Fibrosis after Sepsis: The Underestimated Role of Resident Macrophages and Recruited Monocytes.
Abstract: Sepsis is a life-threatening condition affecting each year an estimated 49 million people and causing 11 million deaths. Short-term mortality of sepsis was substantially reduced during the past decades and is still improving. Besides its short-term lethality, awareness regarding long-term consequences of sepsis is rising. Among all organs affected during sepsis, the kidney is the most vulnerable. Up to 40% of patients suffering from sepsis develop acute kidney injury (AKI), and sepsis is the leading cause of AKI among critically ills. Half of patients will recover from AKI during their stay; however, several studies have pointed out that those patients were at increased risk for the development of subsequent chronic kidney disease (CKD). In patients suffering from transient AKI, a second injury was found to hasten renal fibrogenesis. Taken together those findings challenge the concept of ad integrum recovery and strongly suggest maladaptive repair AKI, together with profound and durable alterations at intra-organ level. Factors driving AKI to CKD after sepsis are poorly understood and could be of multiple origins. Kidney macrophages have pleiotropic roles in health and disease. Following sepsis, a proportion of kidney macrophages undergoes pyroptosis in an "altruist" maneuver to recruit inflammatory cells. Empty niches are later colonized by circulating monocyte arising from bone marrow in a process called emergency myelopoiesis but also by expansion of resident cells. The role of monocytes and macrophages in the acute phase of sepsis is well described, however, their role in the resolution of inflammation is just beginning to be understood. In the present review, we will discuss the fate of kidney resident macrophages and recruited monocytes in septic AKI. We will review the evidence linking changes in the immune landscape and maladaptive repair after sepsis. Finally, we will consider how targeting macrophage recruitment and polarization might influence sepsis long-term consequences.
期刊介绍:
The Journal of the American Society of Nephrology (JASN) stands as the preeminent kidney journal globally, offering an exceptional synthesis of cutting-edge basic research, clinical epidemiology, meta-analysis, and relevant editorial content. Representing a comprehensive resource, JASN encompasses clinical research, editorials distilling key findings, perspectives, and timely reviews.
Editorials are skillfully crafted to elucidate the essential insights of the parent article, while JASN actively encourages the submission of Letters to the Editor discussing recently published articles. The reviews featured in JASN are consistently erudite and comprehensive, providing thorough coverage of respective fields. Since its inception in July 1990, JASN has been a monthly publication.
JASN publishes original research reports and editorial content across a spectrum of basic and clinical science relevant to the broad discipline of nephrology. Topics covered include renal cell biology, developmental biology of the kidney, genetics of kidney disease, cell and transport physiology, hemodynamics and vascular regulation, mechanisms of blood pressure regulation, renal immunology, kidney pathology, pathophysiology of kidney diseases, nephrolithiasis, clinical nephrology (including dialysis and transplantation), and hypertension. Furthermore, articles addressing healthcare policy and care delivery issues relevant to nephrology are warmly welcomed.