AI Article Synopsis

  • Adaptive immune responses in the liver are triggered by major stresses like hemorrhagic shock and trauma, with the inflammasome playing a key role in this process.
  • Recent research showed that caspase-1(-/-) mice experienced more severe liver damage and inflammation than wild-type mice after hemorrhagic shock and femur fractures, suggesting that caspase-1 has a hepatoprotective function.
  • The protective effects of caspase-1 do not rely on the NLRP3 inflammasome or its cytokines (IL-1β and IL-18), implying that understanding this process could help improve treatment options for trauma patients and reduce the risk of multiple organ failure.

Article Abstract

Adaptive immune responses are induced in liver after major stresses such as hemorrhagic shock (HS) and trauma. There is emerging evidence that the inflammasome, the multiprotein platform that induces caspase-1 activation and promotes interleukin (IL)-1β and IL-18 processing, is activated in response to cellular oxidative stress, such as after hypoxia, ischemia and HS. Additionally, damage-associated molecular patterns, such as those released after injury, have been shown to activate the inflammasome and caspase-1 through the NOD-like receptor (NLR) NLRP3. However, the role of the inflammasome in organ injury after HS and trauma is unknown. We therefore investigated inflammatory responses and end-organ injury in wild-type (WT) and caspase-1(-/-)mice in our model of HS with bilateral femur fracture (HS/BFF). We found that caspase-1(-/-) mice had higher levels of systemic inflammatory cytokines than WT mice. This result corresponded to higher levels of liver damage, cell death and neutrophil influx in caspase-1(-/-) liver compared with WT, although there was no difference in lung damage between experimental groups. To determine if hepatoprotection also depended on NLRP3, we subjected NLRP3(-/-) mice to HS/BFF, but found inflammatory responses and liver damage in these mice was similar to WT. Hepatoprotection was also not due to caspase-1-dependent cytokines, IL-1β and IL-18. Altogether, these data suggest that caspase-1 is hepatoprotective, in part through regulation of cell death pathways in the liver after major trauma, and that caspase-1 activation after HS/BFF does not depend on NLRP3. These findings may have implications for the treatment of trauma patients and may lead to progress in prevention or treatment of multiple organ failure (MOF).

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http://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pmc/articles/PMC3188860PMC
http://dx.doi.org/10.2119/molmed.2011.00015DOI Listing

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