Hypercapnic acidosis affects in vitro lung infection response in a pathogen-specific manner
Elena Campaña-Duel, Aina Areny-Balagueró, Luis Morales-Quinteros, Laia Fernández-Barat, Diana Fuertes-Bailón, Antoni Torres, Lluís Blanch, Antonio Artigas, Adrian Ceccato, Marta Camprubí-Rimblas

TL;DR
Hypercapnic acidosis changes how lung cells respond to infections, depending on the type of bacteria involved.
Contribution
The study reveals pathogen-specific effects of hypercapnic acidosis on lung inflammation and epithelial barrier function.
Findings
HCA increased IL-1β production by S. pneumoniae in a CO2-dependent manner.
HCA promoted intracellular replication of P. aeruginosa in macrophages.
Tight junction proteins were upregulated at 1 hour under HCA but declined at 24 hours.
Abstract
Hypercapnic acidosis (HCA) is a hallmark of acute hypercapnic respiratory failure, often triggered by respiratory infections. Its role in lung injury remains controversial, with both protective and detrimental effects reported. However, the specific impact on pulmonary immune responses to lung infections remain poorly understood. To investigate the impact of HCA on alveolar response during infection, we developed an in vitro model combining human alveolar epithelial cells (type I and II) and macrophage-like THP-1 cells. The co-culture and monocultures were infected with Pseudomonas aeruginosa or Streptococcus pneumoniae under normocapnic or HCA conditions. At 1 hour and 24 hours post-infection, we assessed inflammatory cytokine expression (IL-1β, CCL2, IL-8), tight junction protein levels (occludin, ZO-1) and bacterial survival. HCA modulated inflammation in pathogen-specific manner:…
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Taxonomy
TopicsRespiratory Support and Mechanisms · Renal function and acid-base balance · Nosocomial Infections in ICU
