AI Article Synopsis

  • Pediatric acute respiratory distress syndrome (PARDS) is a serious condition in critically ill children, but effective treatments are lacking due to unclear understanding of its biological mechanisms.
  • * Researchers have used both targeted and broad approaches to study PARDS, but most advancements have come from adult studies, leaving a gap in pediatric-specific research.
  • * The authors emphasize the need for advanced techniques like single-cell RNA sequencing to better understand PARDS mechanisms and develop targeted therapies for children.

Article Abstract

Pediatric acute respiratory distress syndrome (PARDS), though both common and deadly in critically ill children, lacks targeted therapies. The development of effective pharmacotherapies has been limited, in part, by lack of clarity about the pathobiology of pediatric ARDS. Epithelial lung injury, vascular endothelial activation, and systemic immune activation are putative drivers of this complex disease process. Prior studies have used either hypothesis-driven (e.g., candidate genes and proteins, in vitro investigations) or unbiased (e.g., genome-wide association, transcriptomic, metabolomic) approaches to predict clinical outcomes and to define subphenotypes. Advances in multiple omics technologies, including genomics, transcriptomics, proteomics, and metabolomics, have permitted more comprehensive investigation of PARDS pathobiology. However, omics studies have been limited in children compared to adults, and analyses across multiple tissue types are lacking. Here, we synthesized existing literature on the molecular mechanism of PARDS, summarized our interrogation of publicly available genomic databases to determine the association of candidate genes with PARDS phenotypes across multiple tissues and cell types, and integrated recent studies that used single-cell RNA sequencing (scRNA-seq). We conclude that novel profiling methods such as scRNA-seq, which permits more comprehensive, unbiased evaluation of pathophysiological mechanisms across tissue and cell types, should be employed to investigate the molecular mechanisms of PRDS toward the goal of identifying targeted therapies.

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Source
http://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pmc/articles/PMC9342956PMC
http://dx.doi.org/10.7554/eLife.77405DOI Listing

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