Bench-to-bedside review: Circulating microparticles - a new player in sepsis?
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* Corresponding author: Florence Toti florence.toti@unistra.fr
1 Service de réanimation médicale, Nouvel Hôpital Civil, Hôpitaux universitaires de Strasbourg, F-67091 Strasbourg, France
2 Laboratoire de Biophotonique et Pharmacologie, UMR 7213 CNRS, Université de Strasbourg, Faculté de Pharmacie, F-67401 Illkirch, France
3 Institut d'Hématologie et d'Immunologie, Faculté de Médecine, Université de Strasbourg, 4 rue Kirschleger, F-67085 Strasbourg, France
4 Laboratoire HIFIH, UPRES EA 3859, IFR 132, Université d'Angers, F-49045 Angers, France
5 Département de réanimation médicale et médecine hyperbare, CHU Angers, F-49933 Angers, France
6 Inserm U770, Hôpital de Bicêtre, F94275 Le Kremlin Bicêtre, France
7 Université Paris-Sud 11, Faculté de Médecine, F94275 Le Kremlin-Bicêtre, France
Critical Care 2010, 14:236 doi:10.1186/cc9231
Published: 20 October 2010Abstract
In sepsis, inflammation and thrombosis are both the cause and the result of interactions between circulating (for example, leukocytes and platelets), endothelial and smooth muscle cells. Microparticles are proinflammatory and procoagulant fragments originating from plasma membrane generated after cellular activation and released in body fluids. In the vessel, they constitute a pool of bioactive effectors pulled from diverse cellular origins and may act as intercellular messengers. Microparticles expose phosphatidylserine, a procoagulant phospholipid made accessible after membrane remodelling, and tissue factor, the initiator of blood coagulation at the endothelial and leukocyte surface. They constitute a secretion pathway for IL-1β and up-regulate the proinflammatory response of target cells. Microparticles circulate at low levels in healthy individuals, but undergo phenotypic and quantitative changes that could play a pathophysiological role in inflammatory diseases. Microparticles may participate in the pathogenesis of sepsis through multiple ways. They are able to regulate vascular tone and are potent vascular proinflammatory and procoagulant mediators. Microparticles' abilities are of increasing interest in deciphering the mechanisms underlying the multiple organ dysfunction of septic shock.