“…HRG is a 75-kDa glycoprotein characterized by many histidine residues and GHHPH repeat sequences, synthesized in and secreted from the liver (Borza, Tatum, & Morgan, 1996;Koide, Foster, Yoshitake, & Davie, 1986;Poon, Patel, Davis, Parish, & Hulett, 2011). It exists in healthy human plasma at 60-100 µg/mL (approximately 1 µM) (Poon et al, 2011) and is reported to possess a variety of physiological activities, including the suppression of erythrocyte aggregation (Zhong et al, 2018), vascular endothelium protection (Gao et al, 2019;Gao et al, 2020), and regulation of blood cell adhesion (Wake et al, 2016). In the animal experiments, we reported that serum HRG levels in septic mice with cecal ligation and puncture (CLP) markedly dcerased while their survival rate increased after HRG supplementation, thus HRG was identified as an effective therapeutic strategy for sepsis (Wake et al, 2016).…”