The basic pathophysiological mechanisms underlying septic cardiomyopathy have not yet been completely clarified. Disease-specific treatments are lacking, and care is still based on supportive modalities. The aim of our study was to assess the protective effects of melatonin on septic cardiomyopathy, with a focus on the interactions between receptor-interacting protein kinase 3 (Ripk3), the mitochondria, endoplasmic reticulum (ER) and cytoskeletal degradation in cardiomyocytes. Ripk3 expression was increased in heart samples challenged with LPS, followed by myocardial inflammation, cardiac dysfunction, myocardial breakdown and cardiomyocyte death. The melatonin treatment attenuated septic myocardial injury in a comparable manner to the genetic depletion of Ripk3. Molecular investigations revealed that Ripk3 intimately regulated mitochondrial function, ER stress, cytoskeletal homeostasis and cardioprotective signaling pathways. Melatonin-mediated inhibition of Ripk3 improved mitochondrial bioenergetics, reduced mitochondria-initiated oxidative damage, sustained mitochondrial dynamics, ameliorated ER stress, normalized calcium recycling, and activated cardioprotective signaling pathways (including AKT, ERK and AMPK) in cardiomyocytes. Interestingly, Ripk3 overexpression mediated resistance to melatonin therapy following the infection of LPS-treated hearts with an adenovirus expressing Ripk3. Altogether, our findings identify Ripk3 upregulation as a novel risk factor for the development of sepsis-related myocardial injury, and melatonin restores the physiological functions of the mitochondria, ER, contractile cytoskeleton and cardioprotective signaling pathways. Additionally, our data also reveal a new, potentially therapeutic mechanism by which melatonin protects the heart from sepsis-mediated dysfunction, possibly by targeting Ripk3.
Irisin plays a protective effect in acute and chronic myocardial damage, but its role in septic cardiomyopathy is unclear. The aim of our study was to explore the in vivo and in vitro effects of irisin using an LPS-induced septic cardiomyopathy model. Our results demonstrated that irisin treatment attenuated LPS-mediated cardiomyocyte death and myocardial dysfunction. At the molecular level, LPS application was associated with mitochondrial oxidative injury, cardiomyocyte ATP depletion and caspaserelated apoptosis activation. In contrast, the irisin treatment sustained mitochondrial function by inhibiting DRP1-related mitochondrial fission and the reactivation of mitochondrial fission impaired the protective action of irisin on inflammation-attacked mitochondria and cardiomyocytes. Additionally, we found that irisin modulated DRP1-related mitochondrial fission through the JNK-LATS2 signaling pathway. JNK activation and/or LATS2 overexpression abolished the beneficial effects of irisin on LPSmediated mitochondrial stress and cardiomyocyte death. Altogether, our results illustrate that LPS-mediated activation of DRP1related mitochondrial fission through the JNK-LATS2 pathway participates in the pathogenesis of septic cardiomyopathy. Irisin could be used in the future as an effective therapy for sepsis-induced myocardial depression because it corrects DRP1-related mitochondrial fission and normalizes the JNK-LATS2 signaling pathway.
Background
Sepsis is considered to be a high-risk factor for cognitive impairment in the brain. The purpose of our study is to explore whether sepsis causes cognitive impairment and try to evaluate the underlying mechanisms and intervention measures.
Methods
Here, we used cecum ligation and puncture (CLP) to simulate sepsis. Open field, Novel Objective Recognition, and Morris Water Maze Test were used to detect cognitive function, long-term potentiation was used to assess of synaptic plasticity, and molecular biological technics were used to assess synaptic proteins, ELISA kits were used to detect inflammatory factors. Metformin was injected into the lateral ventricle of SD rats, and we evaluated whether metformin alleviated CLP-mediated cognitive impairment using behavioral, electrophysiological and molecular biological technology experiments.
Results
Here we report hippocampal-dependent cognitive deficits and synaptic dysfunction induced by the CLP, accompanied by a significant increase in inflammatory factors. At the same time, metformin was able to improve cognitive impairment induced by CLP in adult male rats.
Conclusion
These findings highlight a novel pathogenic mechanism of sepsis-related cognitive impairment through activation of inflammatory factors, and these are blocked by metformin to attenuate sepsis-induced neuronal injury and cognitive impairment.
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