Thermal and Mountain Medicine Division, United States Army Research Institute of Environmental Medicine, Natick, Massachusetts.
Oak Ridge Institute of Science and Education, Oak Ridge, Tennessee.
Am J Physiol Regul Integr Comp Physiol. 2022 Dec 1;323(6):R935-R950. doi: 10.1152/ajpregu.00150.2022. Epub 2022 Oct 25.
Exertional heat stroke (EHS) is a potentially lethal condition resulting from high core body temperatures (T) in combination with a systemic inflammatory response syndrome (SIRS) with varying degrees of severity across victims, and limited understanding of the underlying mechanism(s). We established a mouse model of severe EHS to identify mechanisms of hyperthermia/inflammation that may be responsible for organ damage. Mice were forced to run on a motorized wheel in a 37.5°C chamber until loss of consciousness and were either removed immediately (exertional heat injury or EHI; T = 42.4 ± 0.2°C) or remained in the chamber an additional 20 min (EHS; T = 42.5 ± 0.4°C). Exercise control mice (ExC) experienced identical procedures to EHS at 25°C. At 3 h post-EHS, there was evidence for an immune/inflammatory response as elevated blood chemokine [interferon γ-induced protein 10 (IP-10), keratinocytes-derived chemokine (KC), macrophage inflammatory proteins (MIP-1α), MIP-1β, MIP-2] and cytokine [granulocyte colony-stimulating factor (G-CSF), interleukins (IL-10), IL-6] levels peaked and were highest in EHS mice compared with EHI and ExC mice. Immunoblotting of organs susceptible to EHS damage indicated that several kinases were sensitive to stress associated with heat/inflammation and exercise; specifically, phosphorylation of liver c-Jun NH-terminal kinase (JNK) at threonine 183/tyrosine 185 immediately (0 h) postheating related to heat illness severity. We have established a mouse EHS model, and JNK [or its downstream target(s)] could underlie EHS symptomatology, allowing the identification of molecular pathways or countermeasure targets to mitigate heat illness severity, enable complete recovery, and decrease overall EHS-related fatalities.
运动性热射病(EHS)是一种潜在致命的疾病,其发生是由于核心体温(T)升高,同时伴有全身炎症反应综合征(SIRS),不同患者的严重程度不同,对其潜在机制的认识也有限。我们建立了一种严重 EHS 的小鼠模型,以确定可能导致器官损伤的高热/炎症的机制。将小鼠强制放置在 37.5°C 环境中的电动轮上奔跑,直至失去意识,立即将其移出(运动性热损伤或 EHI;T = 42.4 ± 0.2°C)或在室内再停留 20 分钟(EHS;T = 42.5 ± 0.4°C)。运动对照组(ExC)的小鼠在 25°C 下经历与 EHS 相同的程序。EHS 后 3 小时,出现了免疫/炎症反应的证据,血液趋化因子[干扰素 γ诱导蛋白 10(IP-10)、角质细胞衍生趋化因子(KC)、巨噬细胞炎症蛋白(MIP-1α)、MIP-1β、MIP-2]和细胞因子[粒细胞集落刺激因子(G-CSF)、白细胞介素(IL-10)、IL-6]水平升高,EHS 组小鼠的水平最高,高于 EHI 和 ExC 组小鼠。对易受 EHS 损伤的器官进行免疫印迹分析表明,几种激酶对与热/炎症和运动相关的应激敏感;具体而言,肝脏 c-Jun NH2-末端激酶(JNK)在加热后立即(0 小时)在苏氨酸 183/酪氨酸 185 处的磷酸化与热病严重程度相关。我们已经建立了一种小鼠 EHS 模型,JNK[或其下游靶标]可能是 EHS 症状的基础,这允许确定分子途径或对抗措施的靶标,以减轻热病的严重程度,实现完全恢复,并降低整体与 EHS 相关的死亡率。