Abstract
Sepsis disproportionately affects the very old and the very young. IL-1 signaling is important in innate host defense but may also play a deleterious role in acute inflammatory conditions (including sepsis) by promulgating life-threatening inflammation. IL-1 signaling is mediated by two distinct ligands: IL-1α and IL-1β, both acting on a common receptor (IL-1R1). IL-1R1 targeting has not reduced adult human sepsis mortality despite biologic plausibility. Because the specific role of IL-1α or IL-1β in sepsis survival is unknown in any age group and the role of IL-1 signaling remains unknown in neonates, we studied the role of IL-1 signaling, including the impact of IL-1α and IL-1β, on neonatal murine sepsis survival. IL-1 signaling augments the late plasma inflammatory response to sepsis. IL-1α and not IL-1β is the critical mediator of sepsis mortality, likely because of paracrine actions within the tissue. These data do not support targeting IL-1 signaling in neonates.
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CITATION STYLE
Benjamin, J. T., Moore, D. J., Bennett, C., van der Meer, R., Royce, A., Loveland, R., & Wynn, J. L. (2018). Cutting Edge: IL-1α and Not IL-1β Drives IL-1R1–Dependent Neonatal Murine Sepsis Lethality. The Journal of Immunology, 201(10), 2873–2878. https://doi.org/10.4049/jimmunol.1801089
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