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DHCR7 Expression Predicts Poor Outcomes and Mortality From Sepsis
- Guirgis, Faheem W;
- Jacob, Vinitha;
- Wu, Dongyuan;
- Henson, Morgan;
- Daly-Crews, Kimberly;
- Hopson, Charlotte;
- Black, Lauren Page;
- DeVos, Elizabeth L;
- Sulaiman, Dawoud;
- Labilloy, Guillaume;
- Brusko, Todd M;
- Shavit, Jordan A;
- Bertrand, Andrew;
- Feldhammer, Matthew;
- Baskovich, Brett;
- Graim, Kiley;
- Datta, Susmita;
- Reddy, Srinivasa T
- et al.
Published Web Location
https://doi.org/10.1097/cce.0000000000000929Abstract
This is a study of lipid metabolic gene expression patterns to discover precision medicine for sepsis.
Objectives
Sepsis patients experience poor outcomes including chronic critical illness (CCI) or early death (within 14 d). We investigated lipid metabolic gene expression differences by outcome to discover therapeutic targets.Design setting and particitpants
Secondary analysis of samples from prospectively enrolled sepsis patients (first 24 hr) and a zebrafish endotoxemia model for drug discovery. Patients were enrolled from the emergency department or ICU at an urban teaching hospital. Enrollment samples from sepsis patients were analyzed. Clinical data and cholesterol levels were recorded. Leukocytes were processed for RNA sequencing and reverse transcriptase polymerase chain reaction. A lipopolysaccharide zebrafish endotoxemia model was used for confirmation of human transcriptomic findings and drug discovery.Main outcomes and measures
The derivation cohort included 96 patients and controls (12 early death, 13 CCI, 51 rapid recovery, and 20 controls) and the validation cohort had 52 patients (6 early death, 8 CCI, and 38 rapid recovery).Results
The cholesterol metabolism gene 7-dehydrocholesterol reductase (DHCR7) was significantly up-regulated in both derivation and validation cohorts in poor outcome sepsis compared with rapid recovery patients and in 90-day nonsurvivors (validation only) and validated using RT-qPCR analysis. Our zebrafish sepsis model showed up-regulation of dhcr7 and several of the same lipid genes up-regulated in poor outcome human sepsis (dhcr24, sqlea, cyp51, msmo1, and ldlra) compared with controls. We then tested six lipid-based drugs in the zebrafish endotoxemia model. Of these, only the Dhcr7 inhibitor AY9944 completely rescued zebrafish from lipopolysaccharide death in a model with 100% lethality.Conclusions
DHCR7, an important cholesterol metabolism gene, was up-regulated in poor outcome sepsis patients warranting external validation. This pathway may serve as a potential therapeutic target to improve sepsis outcomes.Many UC-authored scholarly publications are freely available on this site because of the UC's open access policies. Let us know how this access is important for you.
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