José Matallo
University of Ulm
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Featured researches published by José Matallo.
Critical Care Medicine | 2012
Hendrik Bracht; Angelika Scheuerle; Michael Gröger; Balázs Hauser; José Matallo; Oscar McCook; Andrea Seifritz; Ulrich Wachter; Josef Vogt; Martin Matejovic; Peter Møller; Enrico Calzia; Csaba Szabó; Wolfgang Stahl; Kerstin Hoppe; Bettina Stahl; Lorenz Lampl; Michael K. Georgieff; Florian Wagner; Peter Radermacher; F Simon
Objective:Controversial data are available on the effects of hydrogen sulfide during hemorrhage. Because the clinical significance of hydrogen sulfide administration in rodents may not be applicable to larger species, we tested the hypothesis whether intravenous Na2S (sulfide) would beneficially influence organ dysfunction during long-term, porcine hemorrhage and resuscitation. Design:Prospective, controlled, randomized study. Setting:University animal research laboratory. Subjects:Forty-five domestic pigs of either gender. Interventions:Anesthetized and instrumented animals underwent 4 hrs of hemorrhage (removal of 40% of the blood volume and subsequent blood removal/retransfusion to maintain mean arterial pressure at 30 mm Hg). Sulfide infusion was started 2 hrs before hemorrhage, simultaneously with blood removal or at the beginning of retransfusion of shed blood, and continued for 12 hrs. Resuscitation comprised hydroxyethyl starch and norepinenephrine infusion titrated to maintain mean arterial pressure at preshock values. Measurements and Main Results:Before, immediately at the end of and 12 and 22 hrs after hemorrhage, we measured systemic and regional hemodynamics (portal vein, hepatic and right kidney artery ultrasound flow probes) and oxygen transport, nitric oxide and cytokine production (nitrate+nitrite, interleukin-6, tumor necrosis factor-&agr; levels). Postmortem biopsies were analyzed for histomorphology (hematoxylin and eosin staining) and DNA damage (terminal deoxynucleotidyltransferase-mediated dUTP nick-end labeling staining). The progressive kidney (creatinine levels, creatinine clearance), liver (transaminase activities, bilirubin levels), and cardiocirculatory (norepipnehrine requirements, troponin I levels) dysfunction was attenuated in the simultaneous treatment group only, which coincided with reduced lung, liver, and kidney histological damage. Sulfide reduced mortality, however, irrespective of the timing of its administration. Conclusions:While the sulfide-induced protection against organ injury was only present when initiated simultaneously with blood removal, it was largely unrelated to hypothermia. The absence of sulfide-mediated protection in the pretreatment protocol may be due to the accumulation of sulfide during low flow states. In conclusion, sulfide treatment can be effective in hemorrhagic shock, but its effectiveness is restricted to a narrow timing and dosing window.
Shock | 2012
Michael Groeger; José Matallo; Oscar McCook; Florian Wagner; Ulrich Wachter; Olga Bastian; Saskia Gierer; Vera Reich; Bettina Stahl; Markus Huber-Lang; Csaba Szabó; Michael K. Georgieff; Peter Radermacher; Enrico Calzia; Katja Wagner
ABSTRACT Previous studies suggest that sulfide-induced inhibition of cytochrome c oxidase (cCox) and, consequently, the metabolic and toxic effects of sulfide are less pronounced at low body temperature. Because the temperature-dependent effects of sulfide on the inflammatory response are still a matter of debate, we investigated the impact of varying temperature on the cCox excess capacity and the mitochondrial sulfide oxidation by the sulfide-ubiquinone oxidoreductase in macrophage-derived cell lines (AMJ2-C11 and RAW 264.7). Using an oxygraph chamber, the inhibition of mitochondrial respiration was measured by stepwise titrations with sulfide and the nonmetabolizable cCox inhibitor sodium azide at 25°C and 37°C. Using the latter of the two inhibitors, the excess capacity of the cCox was obtained. Furthermore, we quantified the capacity of these cells to withstand sulfide inhibition by measuring the amount required to inhibit respiration by 50% and 90% and the viability of the cells after 24-h exposure to 100 ppm of hydrogen sulfide. At low titration rates, the AMJ2-C11 cells, but not the RAW 264.7 cells, increased their capacity to withstand exogenously added sulfide. This effect was even greater at 25°C than at 37°C. Furthermore, only the AMJ2-C11 cells remained viable after sulfide exposure for 24 h. In contrast, only in the RAW 264.7 cells that an increase in cCox excess capacity was found at low temperatures. In macrophage-derived cell lines, both the excess capacity of cCox and the efficiency of sulfide elimination may increase at low temperatures. These properties may modify the effects of sulfide in immune cells and, potentially, the inflammatory response during sulfide exposure at different body temperatures.
Critical Care Medicine | 2016
Elisabeth Knöller; Tatjana Stenzel; Friederike Broeskamp; Rouven Hornung; Angelika Scheuerle; Oscar McCook; Ulrich Wachter; Josef Vogt; José Matallo; Martin Wepler; Holger Gässler; Michael Gröger; Martin Matejovic; Enrico Calzia; L. Lampl; Michael K. Georgieff; Peter Møller; Peter Radermacher; Sebastian Hafner
Objective:Hemorrhagic shock–induced tissue hypoxia induces hyperinflammation, ultimately causing multiple organ failure. Hyperoxia and hypothermia can attenuate tissue hypoxia due to increased oxygen supply and decreased demand, respectively. Therefore, we tested the hypothesis whether mild therapeutic hypothermia and hyperoxia would attenuate postshock hyperinflammation and thereby organ dysfunction. Design:Prospective, controlled, randomized study. Setting:University animal research laboratory. Subjects:Thirty-six Bretoncelles-Meishan-Willebrand pigs of either gender. Interventions:After 4 hours of hemorrhagic shock (removal of 30% of the blood volume, subsequent titration of mean arterial pressure at 35 mm Hg), anesthetized and instrumented pigs were randomly assigned to “control” (standard resuscitation: retransfusion of shed blood, fluid resuscitation, norepinephrine titrated to maintain mean arterial pressure at preshock values, mechanical ventilation titrated to maintain arterial oxygen saturation > 90%), “hyperoxia” (standard resuscitation, but FIO2, 1.0), “hypothermia” (standard resuscitation, but core temperature 34°C), or “combi” (hyperoxia plus hypothermia) (n = 9 each). Measurements and Main Results:Before, immediately at the end of and 12 and 22 hours after hemorrhagic shock, we measured hemodynamics, blood gases, acid-base status, metabolism, organ function, cytokine production, and coagulation. Postmortem kidney specimen were taken for histological evaluation, immunohistochemistry (nitrotyrosine, cystathionine &ggr;-lyase, activated caspase-3, and extravascular albumin), and immunoblotting (nuclear factor-&kgr;B, hypoxia-inducible factor-1&agr;, heme oxygenase-1, inducible nitric oxide synthase, B-cell lymphoma-extra large, and protein expression of the endogenous nuclear factor-&kgr;B inhibitor). Although hyperoxia alone attenuated the postshock hyperinflammation and thereby tended to improve visceral organ function, hypothermia and combi treatment had no beneficial effect. Conclusions:During resuscitation from near-lethal hemorrhagic shock, hyperoxia attenuated hyperinflammation, and thereby showed a favorable trend toward improved organ function. The lacking efficacy of hypothermia was most likely due to more pronounced barrier dysfunction with vascular leakage–induced circulatory failure.
Critical Care Medicine | 2013
Michael Gröger; Angelika Scheuerle; Florian Wagner; Florian Simon; José Matallo; Oscar McCook; Andrea Seifritz; Bettina Stahl; Ulrich Wachter; Josef Vogt; Martin Matejovic; Peter Møller; Lorenz Lampl; Hendrik Bracht; Enrico Calzia; Michael K. Georgieff; Peter Radermacher; Wolfgang Stahl
Objectives:Accidental hypothermia increases mortality and morbidity after hemorrhage, but controversial data are available on the effects of therapeutic hypothermia. Therefore, we tested the hypothesis whether moderate pretreatment hypothermia would beneficially influence organ dysfunction during long-term, porcine hemorrhage and resuscitation. Design:Prospective, controlled, randomized study. Setting:University animal research laboratory. Subjects:Twenty domestic pigs of either gender. Interventions:Using an extracorporeal heat exchanger, anesthetized and instrumented animals were maintained at 38°C, 35°C, or 32°C core temperature and underwent 4 hours of hemorrhage (removal of 40% of the blood volume and subsequent blood removal/retransfusion to maintain mean arterial pressure at 30 mm Hg). Resuscitation comprised of hydroxyethyl starch and norepinephrine infusion titrated to maintain mean arterial pressure at preshock values. Measurements and Main Results:Before, immediately at the end of, and 12 and 22 hours after hemorrhage, we measured systemic and regional hemodynamics (portal vein, hepatic and right kidney artery ultrasound flow probes) and oxygen transport, and nitric oxide and cytokine production. Hemostasis was assessed by rotation thromboelastometry. Postmortem biopsies were analyzed for histomorphology (hematoxylin and eosin staining) and markers of apoptosis (kidney Bcl-xL and caspase-3 expression). Hypothermia at 32°C attenuated the shock-related lactic acidosis but caused metabolic acidosis, most likely resulting from reduced carbohydrate oxidation. Although hypothermia did not further aggravate shock-related coagulopathy, it caused a transitory attenuation of kidney and liver dysfunction, which was ultimately associated with reduced histological damage and more pronounced apoptosis. Conclusions:During long-term porcine hemorrhage and resuscitation, moderate pretreatment hypothermia was associated with a transitory attenuation of organ dysfunction and less severe histological tissue damage despite more pronounced metabolic acidosis. This effect is possibly due to a switch from necrotic to apoptotic cell death, ultimately resulting from reduced tissue energy deprivation during the shock phase.
Shock | 2015
Sebastian Hafner; Katja Wagner; Martin Wepler; José Matallo; Michael Gröger; Oscar McCook; Angelika Scheuerle; Markus Huber-Lang; Manfred Frick; Sandra Weber; Bettina Stahl; Birgit Jung; Enrico Calzia; Michael K. Georgieff; Peter Møller; Paul Dietl; Peter Radermacher; Florian Wagner
ABSTRACT Blunt chest trauma causes pulmonary and systemic inflammation. It is still a matter of debate whether the long-term course of this inflammatory response is associated with persistent impairment of lung function. We hypothesized that an increase of inflammatory biomarkers may still be present at later time points after blunt chest trauma, eventually, despite normalized lung mechanics and gas exchange. Anesthetized spontaneously breathing male C57BL/6J mice underwent a blast wave–induced blunt chest trauma or sham procedure. Twelve and 24 h later, blood gases and lung mechanics were measured, together with blood, bronchoalveolar lavage (BAL), and tissue cytokine concentrations (multiplex cytokine kit); heme oxygenase 1 (HO-1), activated caspase-3, Bcl-xL, and Bax expression (Western blotting); nuclear factor-&kgr;B activation (electrophoretic mobility shift assay); nitrotyrosine formation; and purinergic (P2XR4 and P2XR7) receptor expression (immunohistochemistry). Histological damage was assessed by hematoxylin and eosin and periodic acid-Schiff staining. High-resolution respirometry allowed assessing mitochondrial respiration in diaphragm biopsies. Chest trauma significantly increased tissue and BAL cytokine levels, associated with a significant increase in HO-1, purinergic receptor expression, and tissue nitrotyrosine formation. In contrast, lung mechanics, gas exchange, and histological damage did not show any significant difference between sham and trauma groups. Activation of the immune response remains present at later time points after murine blunt chest trauma. Discordance of the increased local inflammatory response and preserved pulmonary function may be explained by a dissociation of the immune response and lung function, such as previously suggested after experimental sepsis.
Nitric Oxide | 2014
José Matallo; Josef Vogt; Oscar McCook; Ulrich Wachter; F. Tillmans; M. Groeger; Csaba Szabó; Michael Georgieff; Peter Radermacher; Enrico Calzia
Our aim was to study the ability of an immortalized cell line (AMJ2-C11) to sustain aerobic cell respiration at decreasing oxygen concentrations under continuous sulfide exposure. We assumed that the rate of elimination of sulfide through the pathway linked to the mitochondrial respiratory chain and therefore operating under aerobic conditions, should decrease with limiting oxygen concentrations. Thus, sulfides inhibition of cellular respiration would occur faster under continuous sulfide exposure when the oxygen concentration is in the very low range. The experiments were performed with an O2K-oxygraph (Oroboros Instruments) by suspending 0.5-1×10(6) cells in 2 ml of continuously stirred respiration medium at 37 °C and calculating the oxygen flux (JO2) as the negative derivative of the oxygen concentration in the medium. The cells were studied in two different metabolic states, namely under normal physiologic respiration (1) and after uncoupling of mitochondrial respiration (2). Oxygen concentration was controlled by means of a titration-injection pump, resulting in average concentration values of 0.73±0.05 μM, 3.1±0.2 μM, and 6.2±0.2 μM. Simultaneously we injected a 2 mM Na2S solution at a continuous rate of 10 μl/s in order to quantify the titration-time required to reduce the JO2 to 50% of the initial respiratory activity. Under the lowest oxygen concentration this effect was achieved after 3.5 [0.3;3.5] and 11.7 [6.2;21.2]min in the uncoupled and coupled state, respectively. This time was statistically significantly shorter when compared to the intermediate and the highest O2 concentrations tested, which yielded values of 24.6 [15.5;28.1]min (coupled) and 35.9 [27.4;59.2]min (uncoupled), as well as 42.4 [27.5;42.4]min (coupled) and 51.5 [46.4;51.7]min (uncoupled). All data are medians [25%, and 75% percentiles]. Our results confirm that the onset of inhibition of cell respiration by sulfide occurs earlier under a continuous exposure when approaching the anoxic condition. This property may contribute to the physiological role of sulfide as an oxygen sensor.
Shock | 2017
Benedikt Nussbaum; Tatjana Stenzel; Tamara Merz; Angelika Scheuerle; Oscar McCook; Ulrich Wachter; Josef Vogt; José Matallo; Holger Gässler; Michael Gröger; Martin Matejovic; Enrico Calzia; L. Lampl; Michael K. Georgieff; Peter Møller; Peter Radermacher; Sebastian Hafner
ABSTRACT We previously demonstrated beneficial effects of 22 h of hyperoxia following near-lethal porcine hemorrhagic shock, whereas therapeutic hypothermia was detrimental. Therefore, we investigated whether shorter exposure to hyperoxia (12 h) would still improve organ function, and whether 12 h of hypothermia with subsequent rewarming could avoid deleterious effects after less severe hemorrhagic shock. Twenty-seven anesthetized and surgically instrumented pigs underwent 3 h of hemorrhagic shock by removal of 30% of the blood volume and titration of the mean arterial blood pressure (MAP) to 40 mm Hg. Post-shock, pigs were randomly assigned to control, hyperoxia (FIO2 100% for 12 h) or hypothermia group (34°C core temperature for 12 h with subsequent rewarming). Before, at the end of shock, after 12 and 23 h of resuscitation, data sets comprising hemodynamics, blood gases, and parameters of inflammation and organ function were acquired. Postmortem, kidney samples were collected for immunohistochemistry and western blotting. Hyperoxia exerted neither beneficial nor detrimental effects. In contrast, mortality in the hypothermia group was significantly higher compared with controls (67% vs. 11%). Hypothermia impaired circulation (MAP 64 (57;89) mm Hg vs. 104 (98; 114) mm Hg) resulting in metabolic acidosis (lactate 11.0 (6.6;13.6) mmol L−1 vs. 1.0 (0.8;1.5) mmol L−1) and reduced creatinine clearance (26 (9;61) mL min−1 vs. 77 (52;80) mL min−1) compared to the control group after 12 h of resuscitation. Impaired kidney function coincided with increased renal 3-nitrotyrosine formation and extravascular albumin accumulation. In conclusion, hyperoxia proved to be safe during resuscitation from hemorrhagic shock. The lacking organ-protective effects of hyperoxia compared to resuscitation from near-lethal hemorrhage suggest a dependence of the effectiveness of hyperoxia from shock severity. In line with our previous report, therapeutic hypothermia (and rewarming) was confirmed to be detrimental most likely due to vascular barrier dysfunction.
Shock | 2017
Benedikt Nußbaum; Josef Vogt; Ulrich Wachter; Oscar McCook; Martin Wepler; José Matallo; Enrico Calzia; Michael Gröger; Michael Georgieff; Mark E. Wood; Matthew Whiteman; Peter Radermacher; Sebastian Hafner
ABSTRACT Decreased levels of endogenous hydrogen sulfide (H2S) contribute to atherosclerosis, whereas equivocal data are available on H2S effects during sepsis. Moreover, H2S improved glucose utilization in anaesthetized, ventilated, hypothermic mice, but normothermia and/or sepsis blunted this effect. The metabolic effects of H2S in large animals are controversial. Therefore, we investigated the effects of the H2S donor GYY4137 during resuscitated, fecal peritonitis-induced septic shock in swine with genetically and diet-induced coronary artery disease (CAD). Twelve and 18 h after peritonitis induction, pigs received either GYY4137 (10 mg kg−1, n = 9) or vehicle (n = 8). Before, at 12 and 24 h of sepsis, we assessed left ventricular (pressure-conductance catheters) and renal (creatinine clearance, blood NGAL levels) function. Endogenous glucose production and glucose oxidation were derived from the plasma glucose isotope and the expiratory 13CO2/12CO2 enrichment during continuous i.v. 1,2,3,4,5,6-13C6-glucose infusion. GYY4137 significantly increased aerobic glucose oxidation, which coincided with higher requirements of exogenous glucose to maintain normoglycemia, as well as significantly lower arterial pH and decreased base excess. Apart from significantly lower cardiac eNOS expression and higher troponin levels, GYY4137 did not significantly influence cardiac and kidney function or the systemic inflammatory response. During resuscitated septic shock in swine with CAD, GYY4137 shifted metabolism to preferential carbohydrate utilization. Increased troponin levels are possibly due to reduced local NO availability. Cautious dosing, the timing of GYY4137 administration, and interspecies differences most likely account for the absence of any previously described anti-inflammatory or organ-protective effects of GYY4137 in this model.
Intensive Care Medicine | 2013
Šárka Matějková; Angelika Scheuerle; Florian Wagner; Oscar McCook; José Matallo; Michael Gröger; Andrea Seifritz; Bettina Stahl; Brigitta Vcelar; Enrico Calzia; Michael K. Georgieff; Peter Møller; Hubert Schelzig; Peter Radermacher; Florian Simon
Intensive Care Medicine Experimental | 2013
Martin Wepler; Sebastian Hafner; Angelika Scheuerle; Matthias Reize; Michael Gröger; Florian Wagner; Florian Simon; José Matallo; Frank Gottschalch; Andrea Seifritz; Bettina Stahl; Martin Matejovic; Amar Kapoor; Peter Møller; Enrico Calzia; Michael K. Georgieff; Ulrich Wachter; Josef Vogt; Christoph Thiemermann; Peter Radermacher; Oscar McCook