PR002492 (Project)

Description:Sepsis, killing 11 million people yearly, is associated with increased lactate production - a metabolite mechanistically linked to mortality - complicating glucose administration in sepsis. To understand the mechanism behind hyperlactatemia, we applied the cecal ligation and puncture (CLP) model and studied all pyruvate processing routes in liver mitochondria during acute sepsis. Our data suggest that mitochondrial pyruvate-driven respiration is nearly nonexistent in sepsis, not due to insufficient pyruvate uptake or carboxylation but due to a dysfunctional pyruvate dehydrogenase complex (PDC). Septic mitochondria compensate by glutamate-mediated TCA anaplerosis, simultaneously converting some pyruvate into alanine via enhanced mitochondrial glutamic pyruvate transaminase (GPT2) activity. Notably, PDC dysfunction is not caused by PDC inactivation per se but by a shortage of its cofactor, thiamine pyrophosphate (TPP). TPP supplementation restores pyruvate oxidation both ex vivo and in vivo and protects mice from sepsis. TPP also allows safe glucose administration in mice, leading to a novel, robust TPP-plus-glucose therapy.
Results found

Linked to

 

Label

Description

 

Project

Metabolomics

Subject

A subject from Metabolomics produced as part of the PR002492 project

Subject

A subject from Metabolomics produced as part of the PR002492 project

Subject

A subject from Metabolomics produced as part of the PR002492 project

Subject

A subject from Metabolomics produced as part of the PR002492 project

Biosample

A biosample from Metabolomics produced as part of the PR002492 project

Biosample

A biosample from Metabolomics produced as part of the PR002492 project

Biosample

A biosample from Metabolomics produced as part of the PR002492 project

Biosample

A biosample from Metabolomics produced as part of the PR002492 project

Biosample

A biosample from Metabolomics produced as part of the PR002492 project


  • Subject

    A subject from Metabolomics produced as part of the PR002492 project


  • Subject

    A subject from Metabolomics produced as part of the PR002492 project


  • Subject

    A subject from Metabolomics produced as part of the PR002492 project


  • Subject

    A subject from Metabolomics produced as part of the PR002492 project


  • Biosample

    A biosample from Metabolomics produced as part of the PR002492 project


  • Biosample

    A biosample from Metabolomics produced as part of the PR002492 project


  • Biosample

    A biosample from Metabolomics produced as part of the PR002492 project


  • Biosample

    A biosample from Metabolomics produced as part of the PR002492 project


  • Biosample

    A biosample from Metabolomics produced as part of the PR002492 project

  • DISPLAY PER PAGE
    This repository is under review for potential modification in compliance with Administration directives.