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Zymosan-induced leukocyte and cytokine changes in pigs: a new model for streamlined drug testing against severe COVID-19
Gabor Kokeny; Tamas Bakos; Balint A. Barta; Georgina V. Nagy; Tamas Meszaros; Gergely T. Kozma; Andras Szabo; Janos Szebeni; Bela Merkely; Tamas Radovits.
Affiliation
  • Gabor Kokeny; Semmelweis University
  • Tamas Bakos; Semmelweis University
  • Balint A. Barta; Semmelweis University
  • Georgina V. Nagy; Semmelweis University
  • Tamas Meszaros; Seroscience.com
  • Gergely T. Kozma; Seroscience LLC
  • Andras Szabo; Semmelweis University
  • Janos Szebeni; Semmelweis University
  • Bela Merkely; Semmelweis University
  • Tamas Radovits; Semmelweis University
Preprint in En | PREPRINT-BIORXIV | ID: ppbiorxiv-509252
ABSTRACT
Injection of 0.1 mg/kg zymosan in pigs i.v. elicited transient hemodynamic disturbance within minutes, without major blood cell changes. In contrast, infusion of 1 mg/kg zymosan triggered maximal pulmonary hypertension with tachycardia, lasting for 30 min. This change was followed by a transient granulopenia with a trough at 1 h, and then, up to about 6 h, a major granulocytosis, resulting in a 3-4-fold increase of neutrophil-to-lymphocyte ratio (NLR). In parallel with the changes in WBC differential, qRT-PCR and ELISA analyses showed increased transcription and/or release of inflammatory cytokines and chemokines into blood, including IL-6, TNF-, CCL-2, CXCL-10, and IL-1RA. The expression of IL-6 peaked at already 1.5-2.5 h, and we observed significant correlation between lymphopenia and IL-6 gene expression. While these changes are consistent with zymosans known stimulatory effect on both the humoral and cellular arms of the innate immune system, what gives novel clinical relevance to the co-manifestation of above hemodynamic, hematological, and immune changes is that they represent independent bad prognostic indicators in terminal COVID-19 and other diseases involving cytokine storm. Thus, within a 6 h experiment, the model enables consecutive reproduction of a symptom triad that is characteristic of late-stage COVID-19. Given the limitations of modeling cytokine storm in animals and effectively treating severe COVID-19, the presented relatively simple large animal model may advance the R&D of drugs against these conditions. One of these disease markers (NLR), obtained from a routine laboratory endpoint (WBC differential), may also enable streamlining the model for high throughput drug screening against innate immune overstimulation.
License
cc_by_nc_nd
Full text: 1 Collection: 09-preprints Database: PREPRINT-BIORXIV Type of study: Prognostic_studies Language: En Year: 2022 Document type: Preprint
Full text: 1 Collection: 09-preprints Database: PREPRINT-BIORXIV Type of study: Prognostic_studies Language: En Year: 2022 Document type: Preprint