Genetic predisposition to respiratory infection and sepsis.

Crit Rev Clin Lab Sci

School of Medicine and Pharmacology, University of Western Australia, Perth, Western Australia.

Published: April 2012

AI Article Synopsis

  • Genetic variations influence individual risk for sepsis and pneumonia, with recent advances in genetic analysis enhancing our understanding of immune responses during these conditions.
  • The complexity of genetic polymorphisms, combined with varied study designs and diverse patient populations, complicates the identification of specific genes directly linked to sepsis susceptibility.
  • Future research should take a collaborative, comprehensive approach to explore the collective impact of multiple genetic factors and consider epigenetic influences for a holistic understanding of sepsis risk.

Article Abstract

Genetic variations, in part, determine individual susceptibility to sepsis and pneumonia. Advances in genetic sequence analysis as well as high throughput platform analysis of gene expression has allowed for a better understanding of immunopathogenesis during sepsis. Differences in genes can also modulate immune and inflammatory response during sepsis thereby translating to differences in clinical outcomes. An increasing number of candidate genes have been implicated to play a role in sepsis susceptibility, most of which are controversial with few exceptions. This does not refute the significance of genetic polymorphisms in sepsis, but rather highlights the difficulties and pitfalls related to genetic association studies. These difficulties include differences in study design such as heterogeneous patient cohorts and differences in pathogenic organisms, linkage disequilibrium, and lack of power for detailed haplotype analysis or examination of gene-gene interactions. There is extensive diversity in the pathways of inflammation and immune response during sepsis making it even harder to prove the functional and clinical significance of one single genetic polymorphism which could be easily masqueraded or compensated by other upstream or downstream events of the pathway involved. The majority of studies have analysed candidate genes in isolation from other possible polymorphisms. It is likely that susceptibility to sepsis is the result of polymorphisms from multiple genes rather than one single mutation. Future studies should aim for multi-centered collaborative approach looking at genome wide association or gene profiling to provide a more complete appraisal of the key genetic players in determining genetic susceptibility to sepsis. This review paper will summarise the prominent candidate gene polymorphisms with known functional changes or those with haplotype data. In addition, a summary of the expanding research in the field of epigenetics and post-sepsis immunosuppression will be discussed.

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http://dx.doi.org/10.3109/10408363.2011.641517DOI Listing

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