Please use this identifier to cite or link to this item: https://repository.monashhealth.org/monashhealthjspui/handle/1/58190
Title: A new murine gram-negative sepsis model with standard care satisfies Sepsis-3 and reproduces clinical pathology.
Authors: Bastow C.R.;Mei C.;Wen S.W.;Wilson J.L.;Nguyen H.;Suthya A.R.;Bourne J.H.;Lankadeva Y.R.;Wong C.H.Y.
Monash Health Department(s): Monash University - School of Clinical Sciences at Monash Health
Institution: (Bastow, Mei, Wen, Wilson, Nguyen, Suthya, Bourne, Wong) Centre for Inflammatory Diseases, Department of Medicine, School of Clinical Sciences at Monash Health, Monash University, Clayton, VIC, Australia
(Lankadeva) Translational Cardiovascular and Renal Research Group, Florey Institute of Neuroscience and Mental Health, The University of Melbourne, Melbourne, VIC, Australia
(Lankadeva) Department of Critical Care, Melbourne Medical School, The University of Melbourne, Melbourne, VIC, Australia
(Lankadeva) Department of Anaesthesia, Austin Hospital, Melbourne, VIC, Australia
Issue Date: 23-Apr-2026
Copyright year: 2026
Publisher: Springer Nature
Place of publication: Switzerland
Publication information: Intensive Care Medicine Experimental. 14(1) (no pagination), 2026. Article Number: 39. Date of Publication: 01 Dec 2026.
Journal: Intensive Care Medicine Experimental
Abstract: Background: Sepsis accounts for approximately a third of global mortality, and significant morbidity and economic burden. Whilst the current Sepsis-3 definition has augmented patient identification, supportive care and survival, a lack of clinically relevant animal models has limited our understanding of sepsis disease dynamics over time. Specifically, key knowledge gaps in chronic pathology underpinning the mechanisms leading to organ dysfunction and mortality rates of sepsis survivors have hindered the development of effective therapeutics. Therefore, we developed a new mouse model of abdominal gram-negative sepsis that adheres to Sepsis-3 definitions and expert-led consensus criteria for preclinical sepsis models. Result(s): We tested multiple live strains of Escherichia coli with only clinical isolates causing lethality. Subsequent standard care including broad-spectrum antibiotics and fluid resuscitation reduced the mortality rate to approximately 24 +/- 9.3% (SEM), corroborating clinical observations. Early sepsis disease 12 h post-infection was characterized by cytokine storm, with concentrations of IFN-gamma, CCL2, IL-6, IL-17A, IL-1alpha, IL-10 and M-CSF significantly elevated in multiple tissues up to 7 days post-infection when mice had recovered from objective clinical measures of disease. Furthermore, we observed histological evidence of organ dysfunction in the liver, spleen and kidney at 12 h to 3 days post-infection, validating concurrently increased serum markers of organ damage in our model. Additionally, infected mice treated with standard care exhibited persistent haematological dysfunction, as evidenced by anaemia, thrombocytosis and neutrophilia, at recovery from organ dysfunction 7 days post-infection, features similarly observed in clinical sepsis patients. Conclusion(s): Our new abdominal gram-negative murine sepsis model recapitulates key disease outcomes observed in sepsis patients and allows the study of dysfunctional homeostasis in surviving animals. This model can be utilized to identify and test new therapeutics for abdominal gram-negative sepsis or investigate novel mechanisms of immune dysfunction in sepsis survivors. Modifications to our murine model by utilizing alternate clinical pathogens, routes of infection, and mixed-sex, outbred or aged mice are necessary to recapitulate clinical sepsis heterogeneity and address the inherent limitations of preclinical models. Here, our methodology to establish a model with clinical isolates, satisfaction of Sepsis-3 definitions and preclinical sepsis guidelines provides a framework for the development of future models.Copyright © The Author(s) 2026.
DOI: http://monash.idm.oclc.org/login?url=https://dx.doi.org/10.1186/s40635-026-00886-5
URI: https://repository.monashhealth.org/monashhealthjspui/handle/1/58190
Type: Article
Subjects: aged
anemia
bacterial strain
bacterium isolate
bioinformatics
colony forming unit
cytokine response
cytokine storm
Escherichia coli
euthanasia
flow cytometry
fluid resuscitation
Gram negative sepsis
histology
immunosuppressive treatment
lymphocytopenia
mean corpuscular hemoglobin
mean corpuscular volume
multiple organ failure
murine
neutrophilia
paired end seqiencing
pathology
sepsis
thrombocytosis
tissue injury
urea nitrogen blood level
alanine aminotransferase
beta interferon
colony stimulating factor 1
gamma interferon
interferon
interleukin 10
interleukin 12p70
interleukin 15
interleukin 17
interleukin 18
interleukin 1alpha
interleukin 1beta
interleukin 23
interleukin 27
interleukin 34
interleukin 6
stromal cell derived factor 1
Tamm Horsfall glycoprotein
tumor necrosis factor
enzyme test kit
flow cytometer
high throughput sequencer
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