The Central Role and Possible Mechanisms of Bacterial DNAs in Sepsis Development

Joint Authors

Cheng, Zhenxing
Abrams, Simon T.
Austin, James
Toh, Julien
Wang, Susan Siyu
Wang, Zhi
Yu, Qian
Yu, Weiping
Toh, Cheng Hock
Wang, Guozheng

Source

Mediators of Inflammation

Issue

Vol. 2020, Issue 2020 (31 Dec. 2020), pp.1-11, 11 p.

Publisher

Hindawi Publishing Corporation

Publication Date

2020-08-31

Country of Publication

Egypt

No. of Pages

11

Main Subjects

Diseases

Abstract EN

The pathological roles of bacterial DNA have been documented many decades ago.

Bacterial DNAs are different from mammalian DNAs; the latter are heavily methylated.

Mammalian cells have sensors such as TLR-9 to sense the DNAs with nonmethylated CpGs and distinguish them from host DNAs with methylated CpGs.

Further investigation has identified many other types of DNA sensors distributed in a variety of cellular compartments.

These sensors not only sense foreign DNAs, including bacterial and viral DNAs, but also sense damaged DNAs from the host cells.

The major downstream signalling pathways includeTLR-9-MyD88-IKKa-IRF-7/NF-κB pathways to increase IFN/proinflammatory cytokine production, STING-TBK1-IRF3 pathway to increase IFN-beta, and AIM2-ASC-caspas-1 pathway to release IL-1beta.

The major outcome is to activate host immune response by inducing cytokine production.

In this review, we focus on the roles and potential mechanisms of DNA sensors and downstream pathways in sepsis.

Although bacterial DNAs play important roles in sepsis development, bacterial DNAs alone are unable to cause severe disease nor lead to death.

Priming animals with bacterial DNAs facilitate other pathological factors, such as LPS and other virulent factors, to induce severe disease and lethality.

We also discuss compartmental distribution of DNA sensors and pathological significance as well as the transport of extracellular DNAs into cells.

Understanding the roles of DNA sensors and signal pathways will pave the way for novel therapeutic strategies in many diseases, particularly in sepsis.

American Psychological Association (APA)

Cheng, Zhenxing& Abrams, Simon T.& Austin, James& Toh, Julien& Wang, Susan Siyu& Wang, Zhi…[et al.]. 2020. The Central Role and Possible Mechanisms of Bacterial DNAs in Sepsis Development. Mediators of Inflammation،Vol. 2020, no. 2020, pp.1-11.
https://search.emarefa.net/detail/BIM-1191969

Modern Language Association (MLA)

Cheng, Zhenxing…[et al.]. The Central Role and Possible Mechanisms of Bacterial DNAs in Sepsis Development. Mediators of Inflammation No. 2020 (2020), pp.1-11.
https://search.emarefa.net/detail/BIM-1191969

American Medical Association (AMA)

Cheng, Zhenxing& Abrams, Simon T.& Austin, James& Toh, Julien& Wang, Susan Siyu& Wang, Zhi…[et al.]. The Central Role and Possible Mechanisms of Bacterial DNAs in Sepsis Development. Mediators of Inflammation. 2020. Vol. 2020, no. 2020, pp.1-11.
https://search.emarefa.net/detail/BIM-1191969

Data Type

Journal Articles

Language

English

Notes

Includes bibliographical references

Record ID

BIM-1191969