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Differential expression of the nuclear-encoded mitochondrial transcriptome in pediatric septic shock
Scott L. Weiss, Natalie Z. Cvijanovich, Geoffrey L. Allen, Neal J. Thomas, Robert J. Freishtat, Nick Anas, Keith Meyer, Paul A. Checchia, Thomas P. Shanley, Michael T. Bigham, Julie C. Fitzgerald, Sharon Banschbach, Eileen Beckman, Kelli Howard, Erin Frank
Critical Care · 2014 · ▲ 44 citations
Abstract
INTRODUCTION: Increasing evidence supports a role for mitochondrial dysfunction(definition) in organ injury and immune dysregulation in sepsis. Although differential expression of mitochondrial genes in blood cells has been reported for several diseases in which bioenergetic failure is a postulated mechanism, there are no data about the blood cell mitochondrial transcriptome in pediatric sepsis. METHODS: We conducted a focused analysis using a multicenter genome-wide expression database of 180 children ≤ 10 years of age with septic shock and 53 healthy controls. Using total RNA isolated from whole blood within 24 hours of PICU admission for septic shock, we evaluated 296 nuclear-encoded mitochondrial genes using a false discovery rate of 1%. A series of bioinformatic approaches were applied to compare differentially expressed genes across previously validated gene expression-based subclasses (groups A, B, and C) of pediatric septic shock. RESULTS: In total, 118 genes were differentially regulated in subjects with septic shock compared to healthy controls, including 48 genes that were upregulated and 70 that were downregulated. The top scoring canonical pathway was oxidative phosphorylation, with general downregulation of the 51 genes corresponding to the electron transport system (ETS). The top two gene networks were composed primarily of mitochondrial ribosomal proteins highly connected to ETS complex I, and genes encoding for ETS complexes I, II, and IV that were highly connected to the peroxisome proliferator activated receptor (PPAR) family. There were 162 mitochondrial genes differentially regulated between groups A, B, and C. Group A, which had the highest maximum number of organ failures and mortality, exhibited a greater downregulation of mitochondrial genes compared to groups B and C. CONCLUSIONS: Based on a focused analysis of a pediatric septic shock transcriptomic database, nuclear-encoded mitochondrial genes were differentially regulated early in pediatric septic shock compared to healthy controls, as well as across genotypic and phenotypic distinct pediatric septic shock subclasses. The nuclear genome may be an important mechanism contributing to alterations in mitochondrial bioenergetic function and outcomes in pediatric sepsis.
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- 10.1186/s13054-014-0623-9
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- 2026-06-01 MST
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APA
Weiss, S.L., Cvijanovich, N.Z., Allen, G.L., Thomas, N.J., Freishtat, R.J., Anas, N., Meyer, K., Checchia, P.A., Shanley, T.P., Bigham, M.T., Fitzgerald, J.C., Banschbach, S., Beckman, E., Howard, K., Frank, E., Harmon, K., & Wong, H.R. (2014). Differential expression of the nuclear-encoded mitochondrial transcriptome in pediatric septic shock. <em>Critical Care</em>. https://doi.org/10.1186/s13054-014-0623-9
Vancouver
Weiss SL, Cvijanovich NZ, Allen GL, Thomas NJ, Freishtat RJ, Anas N, et al. Differential expression of the nuclear-encoded mitochondrial transcriptome in pediatric septic shock. Critical Care. 2014. doi:10.1186/s13054-014-0623-9.
BibTeX
@article{scott2014Differ,
title = {Differential expression of the nuclear-encoded mitochondrial transcriptome in pediatric septic shock},
author = {Scott L. Weiss and Natalie Z. Cvijanovich and Geoffrey L. Allen and Neal J. Thomas and Robert J. Freishtat and Nick Anas and Keith Meyer and Paul A. Checchia and Thomas P. Shanley and Michael T. Bigham and Julie C. Fitzgerald and Sharon Banschbach and Eileen Beckman and Kelli Howard and Erin Frank and Kelli Harmon and Hector R. Wong},
journal = {Critical Care},
year = {2014},
doi = {10.1186/s13054-014-0623-9},
}
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