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Dichloroacetate improves systemic energy balance and feeding behavior during sepsis
Tae Seok Oh, Manal Zabalawi, Shalini Jain, David Long, Peter W. Stacpoole, Charles E. McCall, Matthew A. Quinn
Tae Seok Oh, Manal Zabalawi, Shalini Jain, David Long, Peter W. Stacpoole, Charles E. McCall, Matthew A. Quinn
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Research Article Immunology

Dichloroacetate improves systemic energy balance and feeding behavior during sepsis

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Abstract

Sepsis is a life-threatening organ dysfunction caused by dysregulated host response to an infection. The metabolic aberrations associated with sepsis underly an acute and organism-wide hyperinflammatory response and multiple organ dysfunction; however, crosstalk between systemic metabolomic alterations and metabolic reprogramming at organ levels remains unknown. We analyzed substrate utilization by the respiratory exchange ratio, energy expenditure, metabolomic screening, and transcriptional profiling in a cecal ligation and puncture model to show that sepsis increases circulating free fatty acids and acylcarnitines but decreases levels of amino acids and carbohydrates, leading to a drastic shift in systemic fuel preference. Comparative analysis of previously published metabolomics from septic liver indicated a positive correlation with hepatic and plasma metabolites during sepsis. In particular, glycine deficiency was a common abnormality of the plasma and liver during sepsis. Interrogation of the hepatic transcriptome in septic mice suggested that the septic liver may contribute to systemic glycine deficiency by downregulating genes involved in glycine synthesis. Interestingly, intraperitoneal injection of the pyruvate dehydrogenase kinase (PDK) inhibitor dichloroacetate reversed sepsis-induced anorexia, energy imbalance, inflammation, dyslipidemia, hypoglycemia, and glycine deficiency. Collectively, our data indicated that PDK inhibition rescued systemic energy imbalance and metabolic dysfunction in sepsis partly through restoration of hepatic fuel metabolism.

Authors

Tae Seok Oh, Manal Zabalawi, Shalini Jain, David Long, Peter W. Stacpoole, Charles E. McCall, Matthew A. Quinn

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Figure 5

Sepsis dysregulates glycine metabolism.

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Sepsis dysregulates glycine metabolism.
(A) Heatmap depiction of average...
(A) Heatmap depiction of average log2 fold change in gene expression involved in glycine metabolism assessed by RNA-Seq in sham, CLP, and CLP + DCA 30 hours after surgery (n = 4 mice per group). *P < 0.05, **P < 0.01, ***P < 0.001. Statistical significance was determined using an unpaired 2-tailed Student’s t test. (B–E) Schematic representation of hepatic metabolites contributing to glycine depletion during chronic sepsis. Red denotes a metabolite increased in response to sepsis; green indicates a metabolite decreased in response to sepsis; black indicates a metabolite unchanged in response to sepsis; gray indicates a metabolite not measured in our metabolomic screening. (F) Metabolic pathways leading to glycine depletion during sepsis.

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