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Combined In Silico, In Vivo, and In Vitro Studies Shed Insights into the Acute Inflammatory Response in Middle-Aged Mice
Authors
A Torres
AA Beharka
+62 more
AK Schroder
C Franceschi
C Franceschi
C Nathan
CC Chow
CE Lagoa
CR Gomez
DC Morrison
DE Zak
Derek Barclay
Derya Unutmaz
DO Adams
E Alvarez
E Cevenini
EZ Bagci
EZ Bagci
F Aujard
F L’Episcopo
FM Ocasio
G Nieman
H Ochi
H Saito
H Wang
IR Turnbull
J Plowden
JM Cavaillon
JM Prince
John Bartels
K Tateda
KM Greeneltch
L Alvarez-Rodriguez
L Ferrucci
M Gurven
MA West
MJ Yang
R Kumar
R Ostan
RA Kohman
Rami A. Namas
RB Effros
RJ Fahy
RL Zhang
Rosemary Hoffman
Ruben Zamora
S Daun
S Gordon
SC Kang
SF Bradley
SN Zykova
T Inamizu
Timothy R. Billiar
TP Plackett
U Fagiolo
W Schumer
W Wiktor-Jedrzejczak
Y Hasegawa
Y Ito
Y Vodovotz
Y Vodovotz
Y Vodovotz
Yoram Vodovotz
Z Yang
Publication date
1 January 2013
Publisher
'Public Library of Science (PLoS)'
Doi
View
on
PubMed
Abstract
We combined in silico, in vivo, and in vitro studies to gain insights into age-dependent changes in acute inflammation in response to bacterial endotoxin (LPS). Time-course cytokine, chemokine, and NO2-/NO3- data from "middle-aged" (6-8 months old) C57BL/6 mice were used to re-parameterize a mechanistic mathematical model of acute inflammation originally calibrated for "young" (2-3 months old) mice. These studies suggested that macrophages from middle-aged mice are more susceptible to cell death, as well as producing higher levels of pro-inflammatory cytokines, vs. macrophages from young mice. In support of the in silico-derived hypotheses, resident peritoneal cells from endotoxemic middle-aged mice exhibited reduced viability and produced elevated levels of TNF-α, IL-6, IL-10, and KC/CXCL1 as compared to cells from young mice. Our studies demonstrate the utility of a combined in silico, in vivo, and in vitro approach to the study of acute inflammation in shock states, and suggest hypotheses with regard to the changes in the cytokine milieu that accompany aging. © 2013 Namas et al
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