Please use this identifier to cite or link to this item: http://hdl.handle.net/10553/41647
Title: Endotoxin-induced lung alveolar cell injury causes brain cell damage
Authors: Rodríguez-González, Raquel
Ramos-Nuez, Ángela
Martín Barrasa, José Luis 
López-Aguilar, Josefina
Baluja, Aurora
Álvarez, Julián
Rocco, Patricia R. M.
Pelosi, Paolo
Villar, Jesús
UNESCO Clasification: 3109 Ciencias veterinarias
Keywords: Sepsis
acute respiratory distress syndrome
apoptosis
brain injury
inflammation, et al
Issue Date: 2015
Journal: Experimental Biology and Medicine 
Abstract: Sepsis is the most common cause of acute respiratory distress syndrome, a severe lung inflammatory disorder with an elevated morbidity and mortality. Sepsis and acute respiratory distress syndrome involve the release of inflammatory mediators to the systemic circulation, propagating the cellular and molecular response and affecting distal organs, including the brain. Since it has been reported that sepsis and acute respiratory distress syndrome contribute to brain dysfunction, we investigated the brain-lung crosstalk using a combined experimental in vitro airway epithelial and brain cell injury model. Conditioned medium collected from an in vitro lipopolysaccharide-induced airway epithelial cell injury model using human A549 alveolar cells was subsequently added at increasing concentrations (no conditioned, 2%, 5%, 10%, 15%, 25%, and 50%) to a rat mixed brain cell culture containing both astrocytes and neurons. Samples from culture media and cells from mixed brain cultures were collected before treatment, and at 6 and 24 h for analysis. Conditioned medium at 15% significantly increased apoptosis in brain cell cultures 24 h after treatment, whereas 25% and 50% significantly increased both necrosis and apoptosis. Levels of brain damage markers S100 calcium binding protein B and neuron-specific enolase, interleukin-6, macrophage inflammatory protein-2, as well as matrix metalloproteinase-9 increased significantly after treating brain cells with ≥2% conditioned medium. Our findings demonstrated that human epithelial pulmonary cells stimulated with bacterial lipopolysaccharide release inflammatory mediators that are able to induce a translational clinically relevant and harmful response in brain cells. These results support a brain-lung crosstalk during sepsis and sepsis-induced acute respiratory distress syndrome.
URI: http://hdl.handle.net/10553/41647
ISSN: 1535-3702
DOI: 10.1177/1535370214547156
Source: Experimental Biology and Medicine [ISSN 1535-3699), v.240 (1), p. 135-142
URL: https://api.elsevier.com/content/abstract/scopus_id/84920988889
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