A genomic storm in critically injured humans. Author Wenzhong Xiao, Michael Mindrinos, Junhee Seok, Joseph Cuschieri, Alex Cuenca, Hong Gao, Douglas Hayden, Laura Hennessy, Ernest Moore, Joseph Minei, Paul Bankey, Jeffrey Johnson, Jason Sperry, Avery Nathens, Timothy Billiar, Michael West, Bernard Brownstein, Philip Mason, Henry Baker V, Celeste Finnerty, Marc Jeschke, Cecilia López, Matthew Klein, Richard Gamelli, Nicole Gibran, Brett Arnoldo, Weihong Xu, Yuping Zhang, Steven Calvano, Grace McDonald-Smith, David Schoenfeld, John Storey, Perren Cobb, Shaw Warren, Lyle Moldawer, David Herndon, Stephen Lowry, Ronald Maier V, Ronald Davis, Ronald Tompkins, Inflammation Program Publication Year 2011 Type Journal Article Abstract Human survival from injury requires an appropriate inflammatory and immune response. We describe the circulating leukocyte transcriptome after severe trauma and burn injury, as well as in healthy subjects receiving low-dose bacterial endotoxin, and show that these severe stresses produce a global reprioritization affecting >80% of the cellular functions and pathways, a truly unexpected "genomic storm." In severe blunt trauma, the early leukocyte genomic response is consistent with simultaneously increased expression of genes involved in the systemic inflammatory, innate immune, and compensatory antiinflammatory responses, as well as in the suppression of genes involved in adaptive immunity. Furthermore, complications like nosocomial infections and organ failure are not associated with any genomic evidence of a second hit and differ only in the magnitude and duration of this genomic reprioritization. The similarities in gene expression patterns between different injuries reveal an apparently fundamental human response to severe inflammatory stress, with genomic signatures that are surprisingly far more common than different. Based on these transcriptional data, we propose a new paradigm for the human immunological response to severe injury. Journal The Journal of experimental medicine Volume 208 Issue 13 Pages 2581-90 Date Published 12/2011 ISSN Number 1540-9538 DOI 10.1084/jem.20111354 Alternate Journal J Exp Med PMCID PMC3244029 PMID 22110166 PubMedPubMed CentralGoogle ScholarBibTeXEndNote X3 XML