Acute respiratory distress syndrome (ARDS) has a high mortality rate that is due in part to ventilator-induced lung injury (VILI). Nevertheless, the majority of patients eventually recover, which means that their innate reparative capacities eventually prevail. Since there are currently no medical therapies for ARDS, minimizing its mortality thus amounts to achieving an optimal balance between spontaneous tissue repair versus the generation of VILI. In order to understand this balance better, we developed a mathematical model of the onset and recovery of VILI that incorporates two hypotheses: (1) a novel multi-hit hypothesis of epithelial barrier failure, and (2) a previously articulated rich-get-richer hypothesis of the interaction between atelectrauma and volutrauma. Together, these concepts explain why VILI appears in a normal lung only after an initial latent period of injurious mechanical ventilation. In addition, they provide a mechanistic explanation for the observed synergy between atelectrauma and volutrauma. The model recapitulates the key features of previously published in vitro measurements of barrier function in an epithelial monolayer and in vivo measurements of lung function in mice subjected to injurious mechanical ventilation. This provides a framework for understanding the dynamic balance between factors responsible for the generation of and recovery from VILI. 
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                    This content will become publicly available on March 25, 2026
                            
                            Gut bacterial lactate stimulates lung epithelial mitochondria and exacerbates acute lung injury
                        
                    
    
            ABSTRACT Acute respiratory distress syndrome (ARDS) is an often fatal critical illness where lung epithelial injury leads to intrapulmonary fluid accumulation. ARDS became widespread during the COVID-19 pandemic, motivating a renewed effort to understand the complex etiology of this disease. Rigorous prior work has implicated lung endothelial and epithelial injury in response to an insult such as bacterial infection; however, the impact of microorganisms found in other organs on ARDS remains unclear. Here, we use a combination of gnotobiotic mice, cell culture experiments, and re-analyses of a large metabolomics dataset from ARDS patients to reveal that gut bacteria impact lung cellular respiration by releasing metabolites that alter mitochondrial activity in lung epithelium. Colonization of germ-free mice with a complex gut microbiota stimulated lung mitochondrial gene expression. A single human gut bacterial species,Bifidobacterium adolescentis,was sufficient to replicate this effect, leading to a significant increase in mitochondrial membrane potential in lung epithelial cells. We then used genome sequencing and mass spectrometry to confirm thatB. adolescentisproducesL-lactate, which was sufficient to increase mitochondrial activity in lung epithelial cells. Finally, we found that serum lactate was significantly associated with disease severity in patients with ARDS from the Early Assessment of Renal and Lung Injury (EARLI) cohort. Together, these results emphasize the importance of more broadly characterizing the microbial etiology of ARDS and other lung diseases given the ability of gut bacterial metabolites to remotely control lung cellular respiration. Our discovery of a single bacteria-metabolite pair provides aproof-of-conceptfor systematically testing other microbial metabolites and a mechanistic biomarker that could be pursued in future clinical studies. Furthermore, our work adds to the growing literature linking the microbiome to mitochondrial function, raising intriguing questions as to the bidirectional communication between our endo- and ecto-symbionts. 
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                            - Award ID(s):
- 2216550
- PAR ID:
- 10617287
- Publisher / Repository:
- bioRxiv
- Date Published:
- Format(s):
- Medium: X
- Institution:
- bioRxiv
- Sponsoring Org:
- National Science Foundation
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