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Human endothelial cell-derived exosomal microRNA-99a/b drives a sustained inflammatory response during sepsis by inhibiting mTOR expression

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posted on 2023-12-04, 12:10 authored by Glenn Fitzpatrick, Danielle Nader, Rebecca Watkin, Claire McCoy, Gerard CurleyGerard Curley, Steven KerriganSteven Kerrigan
The pathophysiology of sepsis and its accompanying hyper-inflammatory response are key events that lead to multi-organ failure and death. A growing body of literature now suggests that the vascular endothelium plays a critical role in driving early events of sepsis progression. In this study, we demonstrate how endothelial-derived exosomes contribute to a successive pro-inflammatory phenotype of monocytes. Exosomes isolated from S. aureus infected endothelial cells drive both CD11b and MHCII expression in monocytes and contribute dysregulated cytokine production. Conversely, healthy endothelial exosomes had no major effect. microRNA (miRNA) profiling of exosomes identified miR-99 upregulation which we hypothesised as driving this phenotypic change through mechanistic target of rapamycin (mTOR). Knockdown of mTOR with miR-99a and miR-99b mimetics in S. aureus infected monocytes increased IL-6 and decreased IL-10 production. Interestingly, inhibition of miRNAs with antagomirs has the opposing effect. Collectively, endothelial exosomes are driving a pro-inflammatory phenotype in monocytes through dysregulated expression of miR-99a and miR-99b.

Funding

Irish Research Council under the grant GOIPG/2016/1094

History

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The original article is available at https://www.frontiersin.org/

Published Citation

Fitzpatrick G. et al. Human endothelial cell-derived exosomal microRNA-99a/b drives a sustained inflammatory response during sepsis by inhibiting mTOR expression. Front Cell Infect Microbiol. 2022;12:854126.

Publication Date

18 August 2022

PubMed ID

36061862

Department/Unit

  • Anaesthetics and Critical Care
  • Beaumont Hospital
  • School of Pharmacy and Biomolecular Sciences

Research Area

  • Immunity, Infection and Inflammation
  • Vascular Biology
  • Biomaterials and Regenerative Medicine

Publisher

Frontiers Media SA

Version

  • Published Version (Version of Record)

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