Cargando…

Anthrax Toxins Induce Shock in Rats by Depressed Cardiac Ventricular Function

Anthrax infections are frequently associated with severe and often irreversible hypotensive shock. The isolated toxic proteins of Bacillus anthracis produce a non-cytokine-mediated hypotension in rats by unknown mechanisms. These observations suggest the anthrax toxins have direct cardiovascular eff...

Descripción completa

Detalles Bibliográficos
Autores principales: Watson, Linley E., Kuo, Shu-ru, Katki, Khurshed, Dang, Tongyun, Park, Seong Kyu, Dostal, David E., Tang, Wei-Jen, Leppla, Stephen H., Frankel, Arthur E.
Formato: Texto
Lenguaje:English
Publicado: Public Library of Science 2007
Materias:
Acceso en línea:https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pmc/articles/PMC1867860/
https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pubmed/17520025
http://dx.doi.org/10.1371/journal.pone.0000466
_version_ 1782133352597291008
author Watson, Linley E.
Kuo, Shu-ru
Katki, Khurshed
Dang, Tongyun
Park, Seong Kyu
Dostal, David E.
Tang, Wei-Jen
Leppla, Stephen H.
Frankel, Arthur E.
author_facet Watson, Linley E.
Kuo, Shu-ru
Katki, Khurshed
Dang, Tongyun
Park, Seong Kyu
Dostal, David E.
Tang, Wei-Jen
Leppla, Stephen H.
Frankel, Arthur E.
author_sort Watson, Linley E.
collection PubMed
description Anthrax infections are frequently associated with severe and often irreversible hypotensive shock. The isolated toxic proteins of Bacillus anthracis produce a non-cytokine-mediated hypotension in rats by unknown mechanisms. These observations suggest the anthrax toxins have direct cardiovascular effects. Here, we characterize these effects. As a first step, we administered systemically anthrax lethal toxin (LeTx) and edema toxin (EdTx) to cohorts of three to twelve rats at different doses and determined the time of onset, degree of hypotension and mortality. We measured serum concentrations of the protective antigen (PA) toxin component at various time points after infusion. Peak serum levels of PA were in the µg/mL range with half-lives of 10–20 minutes. With doses that produced hypotension with delayed lethality, we then gave bolus intravenous infusions of toxins to groups of four to six instrumented rats and continuously monitored blood pressure by telemetry. Finally, the same doses used in the telemetry experiments were given to additional groups of four rats, and echocardiography was performed pretreatment and one, two, three and twenty-four hours post-treatment. LeTx and EdTx each produced hypotension. We observed a doubling of the velocity of propagation and 20% increases in left ventricular diastolic and systolic areas in LeTx-treated rats, but not in EdTx-treated rats. EdTx-but not LeTx-treated rats showed a significant increase in heart rate. These results indicate that LeTx reduced left ventricular systolic function and EdTx reduced preload. Uptake of toxins occurs readily into tissues with biological effects occurring within minutes to hours of serum toxin concentrations in the µg/mL range. LeTx and EdTx yield an irreversible shock with subsequent death. These findings should provide a basis for the rational design of drug interventions to reduce the dismal prognosis of systemic anthrax infections.
format Text
id pubmed-1867860
institution National Center for Biotechnology Information
language English
publishDate 2007
publisher Public Library of Science
record_format MEDLINE/PubMed
spelling pubmed-18678602007-05-23 Anthrax Toxins Induce Shock in Rats by Depressed Cardiac Ventricular Function Watson, Linley E. Kuo, Shu-ru Katki, Khurshed Dang, Tongyun Park, Seong Kyu Dostal, David E. Tang, Wei-Jen Leppla, Stephen H. Frankel, Arthur E. PLoS One Research Article Anthrax infections are frequently associated with severe and often irreversible hypotensive shock. The isolated toxic proteins of Bacillus anthracis produce a non-cytokine-mediated hypotension in rats by unknown mechanisms. These observations suggest the anthrax toxins have direct cardiovascular effects. Here, we characterize these effects. As a first step, we administered systemically anthrax lethal toxin (LeTx) and edema toxin (EdTx) to cohorts of three to twelve rats at different doses and determined the time of onset, degree of hypotension and mortality. We measured serum concentrations of the protective antigen (PA) toxin component at various time points after infusion. Peak serum levels of PA were in the µg/mL range with half-lives of 10–20 minutes. With doses that produced hypotension with delayed lethality, we then gave bolus intravenous infusions of toxins to groups of four to six instrumented rats and continuously monitored blood pressure by telemetry. Finally, the same doses used in the telemetry experiments were given to additional groups of four rats, and echocardiography was performed pretreatment and one, two, three and twenty-four hours post-treatment. LeTx and EdTx each produced hypotension. We observed a doubling of the velocity of propagation and 20% increases in left ventricular diastolic and systolic areas in LeTx-treated rats, but not in EdTx-treated rats. EdTx-but not LeTx-treated rats showed a significant increase in heart rate. These results indicate that LeTx reduced left ventricular systolic function and EdTx reduced preload. Uptake of toxins occurs readily into tissues with biological effects occurring within minutes to hours of serum toxin concentrations in the µg/mL range. LeTx and EdTx yield an irreversible shock with subsequent death. These findings should provide a basis for the rational design of drug interventions to reduce the dismal prognosis of systemic anthrax infections. Public Library of Science 2007-05-23 /pmc/articles/PMC1867860/ /pubmed/17520025 http://dx.doi.org/10.1371/journal.pone.0000466 Text en Watson et al. http://creativecommons.org/licenses/by/4.0/ This is an open-access article distributed under the terms of the Creative Commons Attribution License, which permits unrestricted use, distribution, and reproduction in any medium, provided the original author and source are properly credited.
spellingShingle Research Article
Watson, Linley E.
Kuo, Shu-ru
Katki, Khurshed
Dang, Tongyun
Park, Seong Kyu
Dostal, David E.
Tang, Wei-Jen
Leppla, Stephen H.
Frankel, Arthur E.
Anthrax Toxins Induce Shock in Rats by Depressed Cardiac Ventricular Function
title Anthrax Toxins Induce Shock in Rats by Depressed Cardiac Ventricular Function
title_full Anthrax Toxins Induce Shock in Rats by Depressed Cardiac Ventricular Function
title_fullStr Anthrax Toxins Induce Shock in Rats by Depressed Cardiac Ventricular Function
title_full_unstemmed Anthrax Toxins Induce Shock in Rats by Depressed Cardiac Ventricular Function
title_short Anthrax Toxins Induce Shock in Rats by Depressed Cardiac Ventricular Function
title_sort anthrax toxins induce shock in rats by depressed cardiac ventricular function
topic Research Article
url https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pmc/articles/PMC1867860/
https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pubmed/17520025
http://dx.doi.org/10.1371/journal.pone.0000466
work_keys_str_mv AT watsonlinleye anthraxtoxinsinduceshockinratsbydepressedcardiacventricularfunction
AT kuoshuru anthraxtoxinsinduceshockinratsbydepressedcardiacventricularfunction
AT katkikhurshed anthraxtoxinsinduceshockinratsbydepressedcardiacventricularfunction
AT dangtongyun anthraxtoxinsinduceshockinratsbydepressedcardiacventricularfunction
AT parkseongkyu anthraxtoxinsinduceshockinratsbydepressedcardiacventricularfunction
AT dostaldavide anthraxtoxinsinduceshockinratsbydepressedcardiacventricularfunction
AT tangweijen anthraxtoxinsinduceshockinratsbydepressedcardiacventricularfunction
AT lepplastephenh anthraxtoxinsinduceshockinratsbydepressedcardiacventricularfunction
AT frankelarthure anthraxtoxinsinduceshockinratsbydepressedcardiacventricularfunction