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Dive into the research topics where Michael A. Flierl is active.

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Featured researches published by Michael A. Flierl.


Nature Protocols | 2009

Immunodesign of experimental sepsis by cecal ligation and puncture

Daniel Rittirsch; Markus Huber-Lang; Michael A. Flierl; Peter A. Ward

Sepsis remains a prevalent clinical challenge and the underlying pathophysiology is still poorly understood. To investigate the complex molecular mechanisms of sepsis, various animal models have been developed, the most frequently used being the cecal ligation and puncture (CLP) model in rodents. In this model, sepsis originates from a polymicrobial infectious focus within the abdominal cavity, followed by bacterial translocation into the blood compartment, which then triggers a systemic inflammatory response. A requirement of this model is that it is performed with high consistency to obtain reproducible results. Evidence is now emerging that the accompanying inflammatory response varies with the severity grade of sepsis, which is highly dependent on the extent of cecal ligation. In this protocol, we define standardized procedures for inducing sepsis in mice and rats by applying defined severity grades of sepsis through modulation of the position of cecal ligation. The CLP procedure can be performed in as little as 10 min for each animal by an experienced user, with additional time required for subsequent postoperative care and data collection.


Nature Medicine | 2006

Generation of C5a in the absence of C3: a new complement activation pathway.

Markus Huber-Lang; J. Vidya Sarma; Firas S. Zetoune; Daniel Rittirsch; Thomas A. Neff; Stephanie R. McGuire; John D. Lambris; Roscoe L. Warner; Michael A. Flierl; Laszlo M. Hoesel; Florian Gebhard; John G. Younger; Scott M. Drouin; Rick A. Wetsel; Peter A. Ward

Complement-mediated tissue injury in humans occurs upon deposition of immune complexes, such as in autoimmune diseases and acute respiratory distress syndrome. Acute lung inflammatory injury in wild-type and C3−/− mice after deposition of IgG immune complexes was of equivalent intensity and was C5a dependent, but injury was greatly attenuated in Hc−/− mice (Hc encodes C5). Injury in lungs of C3−/− mice and C5a levels in bronchoalveolar lavage (BAL) fluids from these mice were greatly reduced in the presence of antithrombin III (ATIII) or hirudin but were not reduced in similarly treated C3+/+ mice. Plasma from C3−/− mice contained threefold higher levels of thrombin activity compared to plasma from C3+/+ mice. There were higher levels of F2 mRNA (encoding prothrombin) as well as prothrombin and thrombin protein in liver of C3−/− mice compared to C3+/+ mice. A potent solid-phase C5 convertase was generated using plasma from either C3+/+ or C3−/− mice. Human C5 incubated with thrombin generated C5a that was biologically active. These data suggest that, in the genetic absence of C3, thrombin substitutes for the C3-dependent C5 convertase. This linkage between the complement and coagulation pathways may represent a new pathway of complement activation.


Journal of Immunology | 2010

Molecular Intercommunication between the Complement and Coagulation Systems

Umme Amara; Michael A. Flierl; Daniel Rittirsch; Andreas Klos; Hui Chen; Barbara Acker; Uwe B. Brückner; Bo Nilsson; Florian Gebhard; John D. Lambris; Markus Huber-Lang

The complement system as well as the coagulation system has fundamental clinical implications in the context of life-threatening tissue injury and inflammation. Associations between both cascades have been proposed, but the precise molecular mechanisms remain unknown. The current study reports multiple links for various factors of the coagulation and fibrinolysis cascades with the central complement components C3 and C5 in vitro and ex vivo. Thrombin, human coagulation factors (F) XIa, Xa, and IXa, and plasmin were all found to effectively cleave C3 and C5. Mass spectrometric analyses identified the cleavage products as C3a and C5a, displaying identical molecular weights as the native anaphylatoxins C3a and C5a. Cleavage products also exhibited robust chemoattraction of human mast cells and neutrophils, respectively. Enzymatic activity for C3 cleavage by the investigated clotting and fibrinolysis factors is defined in the following order: FXa > plasmin > thrombin > FIXa > FXIa > control. Furthermore, FXa-induced cleavage of C3 was significantly suppressed in the presence of the selective FXa inhibitors fondaparinux and enoxaparin in a concentration-dependent manner. Addition of FXa to human serum or plasma activated complement ex vivo, represented by the generation of C3a, C5a, and the terminal complement complex, and decreased complement hemolytic serum activity that defines exact serum concentration that results in complement-mediated lysis of 50% of sensitized sheep erythrocytes. Furthermore, in plasma from patients with multiple injuries (n = 12), a very early appearance and correlation of coagulation (thrombin–antithrombin complexes) and the complement activation product C5a was found. The present data suggest that coagulation/fibrinolysis proteases may act as natural C3 and C5 convertases, generating biologically active anaphylatoxins, linking both cascades via multiple direct interactions in terms of a complex serine protease system.


Nature | 2007

Phagocyte-derived catecholamines enhance acute inflammatory injury.

Michael A. Flierl; Daniel Rittirsch; Brian A. Nadeau; Anthony J. Chen; J. Vidya Sarma; Firas S. Zetoune; Stephanie R. McGuire; Rachel P. List; Danielle E. Day; L. Marco Hoesel; Hongwei Gao; Nico van Rooijen; Markus Huber-Lang; Richard R. Neubig; Peter A. Ward

It is becoming increasingly clear that the autonomic nervous system and the immune system demonstrate cross-talk during inflammation by means of sympathetic and parasympathetic pathways. We investigated whether phagocytes are capable of de novo production of catecholamines, suggesting an autocrine/paracrine self-regulatory mechanism by catecholamines during inflammation, as has been described for lymphocytes. Here we show that exposure of phagocytes to lipopolysaccharide led to a release of catecholamines and an induction of catecholamine-generating and degrading enzymes, indicating the presence of the complete intracellular machinery for the generation, release and inactivation of catecholamines. To assess the importance of these findings in vivo, we chose two models of acute lung injury. Blockade of α2-adrenoreceptors or catecholamine-generating enzymes greatly suppressed lung inflammation, whereas the opposite was the case either for an α2-adrenoreceptor agonist or for inhibition of catecholamine-degrading enzymes. We were able to exclude T cells or sympathetic nerve endings as sources of the injury-modulating catecholamines. Our studies identify phagocytes as a new source of catecholamines, which enhance the inflammatory response.


Advances in Experimental Medicine and Biology | 2008

Interaction Between the Coagulation and Complement System

Umme Amara; Daniel Rittirsch; Michael A. Flierl; Uwe B. Brückner; Andreas Klos; Florian Gebhard; John D. Lambris; Markus Huber-Lang

The complement system as a main column of innate immunity and the coagulation system as a main column in hemostasis undergo massive activation early after injury. Interactions between the two cascades have often been proposed but the precise molecular pathways of this interplay are still in the dark. To elucidate the mechanisms involved, the effects of various coagulation factors on complement activation and generation of anaphylatoxins were investigated and summarized in the light of the latest literature. Own in vitro findings suggest, that the coagulation factors FXa, FXIa and plasmin may cleave both C5 and C3, and robustly generate C5a and C3a (as detected by immunoblotting and ELISA). The produced anaphylatoxins were found to be biologically active as shown by a dose-dependent chemotactic response of neutrophils and HMC-1 cells, respectively. Thrombin did not only cleave C5 (Huber-Lang et al. 2006) but also in vitro-generated C3a when incubated with native C3. The plasmin-induced cleavage activity could be dose-dependently blocked by the serine protease inhibitor aprotinin and leupeptine. These findings suggest that various serine proteases belonging to the coagulation system are able to activate the complement cascade independently of the established pathways. Moreover, functional C5a and C3a are generated, both of which are known to be crucially involved in the inflammatory response.


Nature Protocols | 2009

Mouse closed head injury model induced by a weight-drop device

Michael A. Flierl; Philip F. Stahel; Kathryn Beauchamp; Steven J. Morgan; Wade R. Smith; Esther Shohami

Traumatic brain injury represents the leading cause of death in young individuals. Various animal models have been developed to mimic human closed head injury (CHI). Widely used models induce head injury by lateral fluid percussion, a controlled cortical impact or impact acceleration. The presented model induces a CHI by a standardized weight-drop device inducing a focal blunt injury over an intact skull without pre-injury manipulations. The resulting impact triggers a profound neuroinflammatory response within the intrathecal compartment with high consistency and reproducibility, leading to neurological impairment and breakdown of the blood–brain barrier. In this protocol, we define standardized procedures for inducing CHI in mice and determine various severity grades of CHI through modulation of the weight falling height. In experienced hands, this CHI model can be carried out in as little as 30 s per animal, with additional time required for subsequent posttraumatic analysis and data collection.


The FASEB Journal | 2008

Adverse functions of IL-17A in experimental sepsis

Michael A. Flierl; Daniel Rittirsch; Hongwei Gao; Laszlo M. Hoesel; Brian A. Nadeau; Danielle E. Day; Firas S. Zetoune; J. Vidya Sarma; Markus Huber-Lang; James L.M. Ferrara; Peter A. Ward

IL‐17A is a proinflammatory cytokine produced by a variety of cells. In the current study, we examined the role of IL‐17A in sepsis induced in mice by cecal ligation and puncture (CLP). IL‐17A levels, which rose time‐dependently in plasma after CLP, were not affected in the absence of αβ T cells or neutrophils. In sharp contrast, γδ T cell‐knockout or γδ T cell‐depleted mice displayed baseline IL‐17A plasma levels after CLP. Neutralization of IL‐17A by two different antibodies improved sepsis (survival from ~10% to nearly 60%). Unexpectedly, antibody treatment was protective, even when administration of anti‐IL‐17A was delayed for up to 12 h after CLP. These protective effects of IL‐17A blockade were associated with substantially reduced levels of bacteremia together with significant reductions of systemic proinflammatory cytokines and chemokines in plasma. In vitro incubation of mouse peritoneal macrophages with lipopolysaccharide (LPS) in the copresence of IL‐17A substantially increased the production of TNF‐α, IL‐1β, and IL‐6 by these cells. These data suggest that, during experimental sepsis, γδ T cell‐derived IL‐17A promotes high levels of proinflammatory mediators and bacteremia, resulting in enhanced lethality. IL‐17A may be a potential therapeutic target in sepsis.—Flierl, M. A., Rittirsch, D., Gao, H., Hoesel, L. M., Nadeau, B. A., Day, D. E., Zetoune, F. S., Sarma, J. V., Huber‐Lang, M. S., Ferrara, J. L. M., Ward, P. A. Adverse functions of IL‐17A in experimental sepsis. FASEB J. 22, 2198–2205 (2008)


PLOS ONE | 2009

Upregulation of Phagocyte-Derived Catecholamines Augments the Acute Inflammatory Response

Michael A. Flierl; Daniel Rittirsch; Brian A. Nadeau; J. Vidya Sarma; Danielle E. Day; Alex B. Lentsch; Markus Huber-Lang; Peter A. Ward

Following our recent report that phagocytic cells (neutrophils, PMNs, and macrophages) are newly discovered sources of catecholamines, we now show that both epinephrine and norepinephrine directly activate NFκB in macrophages, causing enhanced release of proinflammatory cytokines (TNFα, IL-1β, IL-6). Both adrenal-intact (AD+) and adrenalectomized (ADX) rodents were used, because ADX animals had greatly enhanced catecholamine release from phagocytes, facilitating our efforts to understand the role of catecholamines released from phagocytes. Phagocytes isolated from adrenalectomized rats displayed enhanced expression of tyrosine-hydroxylase and dopamine-β-hydroxylase, two key enzymes for catecholamine production and exhibited higher baseline secretion of norepinephrine and epinephrine. The effects of upregulation of phagocyte-derived catecholamines were investigated in two models of acute lung injury (ALI). Increased levels of phagocyte-derived catecholamines were associated with intensification of the acute inflammatory response, as assessed by increased plasma leak of albumin, enhanced myeloperoxidase content in lungs, augmented levels of proinflammatory mediators in bronchoalveolar lavage fluids, and elevated expression of pulmonary ICAM-1 and VCAM-1. In adrenalectomized rats, development of ALI was enhanced and related to α2-adrenoceptors engagement but not to involvement of mineralocorticoid or glucocorticoid receptors. Collectively, these data demonstrate that catecholamines are potent inflammatory activators of macrophages, upregulating NFκB and further downstream cytokine production of these cells. In adrenalectomized animals, which have been used to further assess the role of catecholamines, there appears to be a compensatory increase in catecholamine generating enzymes and catecholamines in macrophages, resulting in amplification of the acute inflammatory response via engagement of α2-adrenoceptors.


Molecular Medicine | 2008

Molecular events in the cardiomyopathy of sepsis.

Michael A. Flierl; Daniel Rittirsch; Markus Huber-Lang; J. Vidya Sarma; Peter A. Ward

Septic cardiomyopathy is a well-described complication of severe sepsis and septic shock. However, the interplay of its underlying mechanisms remains enigmatic. Consequently, we constantly add to our pathophysiological understanding of septic cardiomyopathy. Various cardiosuppressive mediators have been discovered, as have multiple molecular mechanisms (alterations of myocardial calcium homeostasis, mitochondrial dysfunction, and myocardial apoptosis) that may be involved in myocardial dysfunction during sepsis. Finally, the detrimental roles of nitric oxide and peroxynitrite have been unraveled. Here, we describe our present understanding of systemic, supracellular, and cellular molecular mechanisms involved in sepsis-induced myocardial suppression.


Journal of Immunology | 2008

Acute Lung Injury Induced by Lipopolysaccharide Is Independent of Complement Activation

Daniel Rittirsch; Michael A. Flierl; Danielle E. Day; Brian A. Nadeau; Stephanie R. McGuire; Laszlo M. Hoesel; Kyros Ipaktchi; Firas S. Zetoune; J. Vidya Sarma; Lin Leng; Markus Huber-Lang; Thomas A. Neff; Richard Bucala; Peter A. Ward

Although acute lung injury (ALI) is an important problem in humans, its pathogenesis is poorly understood. Airway instillation of bacterial LPS, a known complement activator, represents a frequently used model of ALI. In the present study, pathways in the immunopathogenesis of ALI were evaluated. ALI was induced in wild-type, C3−/−, and C5−/− mice by airway deposition of LPS. To assess the relevant inflammatory mediators, bronchoalveolar lavage fluids were evaluated by ELISA analyses and various neutralizing Abs and receptor antagonists were administered in vivo. LPS-induced ALI was neutrophil-dependent, but it was not associated with generation of C5a in the lung and was independent of C3, C5, or C5a. Instead, LPS injury was associated with robust generation of macrophage migration inhibitory factor (MIF), leukotriene B4 (LTB4), and high mobility group box 1 protein (HMGB1) and required engagement of receptors for both MIF and LTB4. Neutralization of MIF or blockade of the MIF receptor and/or LTB4 receptor resulted in protection from LPS-induced ALI. These findings indicate that the MIF and LTB4 mediator pathways are involved in the immunopathogenesis of LPS-induced experimental ALI. Most strikingly, complement activation does not contribute to the development of ALI in the LPS model.

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Philip F. Stahel

University of Colorado Denver

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Peter A. Ward

Natural Environment Research Council

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Steven J. Morgan

University of Colorado Denver

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Wade R. Smith

University of Colorado Denver

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