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Pro-Coagulant Endothelial Dysfunction Results from EHEC Shiga Toxins and Host Damage-Associated Molecular Patterns

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2015

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Frontiers Media S.A.
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Mayer, Chad L., Caitlin S. L. Parello, Benjamin C. Lee, Kiyoshi Itagaki, Shinichiro Kurosawa, and Deborah J. Stearns-Kurosawa. 2015. “Pro-Coagulant Endothelial Dysfunction Results from EHEC Shiga Toxins and Host Damage-Associated Molecular Patterns.” Frontiers in Immunology 6 (1): 155. doi:10.3389/fimmu.2015.00155. http://dx.doi.org/10.3389/fimmu.2015.00155.

Abstract

Hemolytic uremic syndrome (HUS) from enterohemorrhagic Escherichia coli infection is a leading cause of kidney failure in otherwise healthy U.S. children. The bacterial Shiga toxins (Stx) induce the characteristic coagulopathy of HUS, but the damage to toxin-receptor expressing cells and organ injury due to ischemia likely also releases inflammatory damage-associated molecular patterns (DAMPs), which may exacerbate injury along with the toxins. To examine this, human aortic and renal glomerular cell anti-coagulant and barrier functions were studied after in vitro challenge with Stx1, Stx2, and DAMPs. There was significant loss of surface anti-coagulant protein C pathway molecules, increased expression of pro-thrombotic PAR1 and reduced protein C activation capability by 15–27%. Histones nearly completely prevented the activated protein C protection of endothelial cells from thrombin-induced permeability. In mice, lethal Stx2 challenge elevated plasma HMGB1 (day 2, 321 ± 118%; p < 0.01) and extracellular histones (day 3, 158 ± 62%; p < 0.01). Mice colonized with Stx2-expressing Citrobacter rodentium developed increased HMGB1 (day 5, 155 ± 55%; p < 0.01) and histones (day 3, 378 ± 188%; p < 0.01). Anti-histone antibody reduced both DAMPs to baseline, but was not sufficient to improve survival outcome or kidney function. Together, these data suggest a potential role Stx to produce DAMPs, and DAMPs to produce endothelial injury and a pro-thrombotic environment.

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hemolytic uremic syndrome, thrombotic microangiopathy, Shiga toxin 1, Shiga toxin 2, protein C, damage-associated molecular patterns, endothelial cells

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