Inflammasome Activation in an In Vitro Sepsis Model Recapitulates Increased Monocyte Distribution Width Seen in Patients With Sepsis

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Abstract

OBJECTIVES: Increased monocyte distribution width (MDW) has recently been shown to be a reliable indicator of early sepsis detection. This study therefore sought to determine if inflammasome activation can be linked to monocyte size changes in sepsis. DESIGN: An in vitro sepsis model using bacterial endotoxin (lipopolysaccharide [LPS]) to study the effect of inflammasome activation on monocyte cell size distribution by microscopy and MDW measurements using a standard clinical hematology analyzer. SETTING: University research laboratory. SUBJECTS: Healthy adult volunteers and cultured human monocyte cells in wild-type state and after clustered regularly interspaced short palindromic repeats/CRISPR-associated protein 9 knockout of key inflammasome components (apoptosis-associated speck-like protein containing a caspase recruitment domain, caspase-1, gasdermin-D). INTERVENTIONS: In vitro treatment of specimens with bacterial LPS. MEASUREMENTS AND MAIN RESULTS: Wild-type THP1 cells demonstrated a significant increase in cell area (207 μm2 [159-400 μm2] vs 160 μm2 [134-198 μm2]; p < 0.001) and distribution width (198 vs 55 μm2; p < 0.0001) by microscopy following treatment with LPS. Increased MDW correlated with inflammasome activation as demonstrated by release of interleukin (IL)-1β and with the presence of large distended pyroptotic cells by microscopy. All of these effects were blocked in the inflammasome knockout cells. Whole blood samples treated similarly also demonstrated IL-1β release and increased MDW (median 24.7 U [22.2-27.2 U] vs 16.3 U [15.1-17.6 U]; p = 0.008) as measured using the Beckman-Coulter Unicel DxH900 analyzer. When peripheral blood mononuclear cells were isolated prior to treatment with LPS, microscopy confirmed the presence of large pyroptotic cells correlating to IL-1β release in the human subject samples as well. CONCLUSIONS: The increased MDW seen in patients with sepsis can be reproduced in an in vitro sepsis model and blocked using clustered regularly interspaced short palindromic repeats/CRISPR-associated protein 9 technology to inactivate the inflammasome. These findings suggest that pyroptotic cellular swelling underlies changes in MDW in septic patients and connect MDW to early events in the inflammatory cascade of sepsis.

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Eisinger, G. J., Osman, W., Prather, E. R., Julian, M. W., Gavrilin, M. A., Crouser, E. D., & Wewers, M. D. (2022). Inflammasome Activation in an In Vitro Sepsis Model Recapitulates Increased Monocyte Distribution Width Seen in Patients With Sepsis. Critical Care Explorations, 4(2), E0631. https://doi.org/10.1097/CCE.0000000000000631

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