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Reactivation of M. tuberculosis Infection in Trans-Membrane Tumour Necrosis Factor Mice

Of those individuals who are infected with M. tuberculosis, 90% do not develop active disease and represents a large reservoir of M. tuberculosis with the potential for reactivation of infection. Sustained TNF expression is required for containment of persistent infection and TNF neutralization lead...

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Autores principales: Dambuza, Ivy, Keeton, Roanne, Allie, Nasiema, Hsu, Nai-Jen, Randall, Philippa, Sebesho, Boipelo, Fick, Lizette, Quesniaux, Valerie J. F., Jacobs, Muazzam
Formato: Online Artículo Texto
Lenguaje:English
Publicado: Public Library of Science 2011
Materias:
Acceso en línea:https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pmc/articles/PMC3221652/
https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pubmed/22132068
http://dx.doi.org/10.1371/journal.pone.0025121
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author Dambuza, Ivy
Keeton, Roanne
Allie, Nasiema
Hsu, Nai-Jen
Randall, Philippa
Sebesho, Boipelo
Fick, Lizette
Quesniaux, Valerie J. F.
Jacobs, Muazzam
author_facet Dambuza, Ivy
Keeton, Roanne
Allie, Nasiema
Hsu, Nai-Jen
Randall, Philippa
Sebesho, Boipelo
Fick, Lizette
Quesniaux, Valerie J. F.
Jacobs, Muazzam
author_sort Dambuza, Ivy
collection PubMed
description Of those individuals who are infected with M. tuberculosis, 90% do not develop active disease and represents a large reservoir of M. tuberculosis with the potential for reactivation of infection. Sustained TNF expression is required for containment of persistent infection and TNF neutralization leads to tuberculosis reactivation. In this study, we investigated the contribution of soluble TNF (solTNF) and transmembrane TNF (Tm-TNF) in immune responses generated against reactivating tuberculosis. In a chemotherapy induced tuberculosis reactivation model, mice were challenged by aerosol inhalation infection with low dose M. tuberculosis for three weeks to establish infection followed chemotherapeutic treatment for six weeks, after which therapy was terminated and tuberculosis reactivation investigated. We demonstrate that complete absence of TNF results in host susceptibility to M. tuberculosis reactivation in the presence of established mycobacteria-specific adaptive immunity with mice displaying unrestricted bacilli growth and diffused granuloma structures compared to WT control mice. Interestingly, bacterial re-emergence is contained in Tm-TNF mice during the initial phases of tuberculosis reactivation, indicating that Tm-TNF sustains immune pressure as in WT mice. However, Tm-TNF mice show susceptibility to long term M. tuberculosis reactivation associated with uncontrolled influx of leukocytes in the lungs and reduced IL-12p70, IFNγ and IL-10, enlarged granuloma structures, and failure to contain mycobacterial replication relative to WT mice. In conclusion, we demonstrate that both solTNF and Tm-TNF are required for maintaining immune pressure to contain reactivating M. tuberculosis bacilli even after mycobacteria-specific immunity has been established.
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spelling pubmed-32216522011-11-30 Reactivation of M. tuberculosis Infection in Trans-Membrane Tumour Necrosis Factor Mice Dambuza, Ivy Keeton, Roanne Allie, Nasiema Hsu, Nai-Jen Randall, Philippa Sebesho, Boipelo Fick, Lizette Quesniaux, Valerie J. F. Jacobs, Muazzam PLoS One Research Article Of those individuals who are infected with M. tuberculosis, 90% do not develop active disease and represents a large reservoir of M. tuberculosis with the potential for reactivation of infection. Sustained TNF expression is required for containment of persistent infection and TNF neutralization leads to tuberculosis reactivation. In this study, we investigated the contribution of soluble TNF (solTNF) and transmembrane TNF (Tm-TNF) in immune responses generated against reactivating tuberculosis. In a chemotherapy induced tuberculosis reactivation model, mice were challenged by aerosol inhalation infection with low dose M. tuberculosis for three weeks to establish infection followed chemotherapeutic treatment for six weeks, after which therapy was terminated and tuberculosis reactivation investigated. We demonstrate that complete absence of TNF results in host susceptibility to M. tuberculosis reactivation in the presence of established mycobacteria-specific adaptive immunity with mice displaying unrestricted bacilli growth and diffused granuloma structures compared to WT control mice. Interestingly, bacterial re-emergence is contained in Tm-TNF mice during the initial phases of tuberculosis reactivation, indicating that Tm-TNF sustains immune pressure as in WT mice. However, Tm-TNF mice show susceptibility to long term M. tuberculosis reactivation associated with uncontrolled influx of leukocytes in the lungs and reduced IL-12p70, IFNγ and IL-10, enlarged granuloma structures, and failure to contain mycobacterial replication relative to WT mice. In conclusion, we demonstrate that both solTNF and Tm-TNF are required for maintaining immune pressure to contain reactivating M. tuberculosis bacilli even after mycobacteria-specific immunity has been established. Public Library of Science 2011-11-21 /pmc/articles/PMC3221652/ /pubmed/22132068 http://dx.doi.org/10.1371/journal.pone.0025121 Text en Dambuza et al. http://creativecommons.org/licenses/by/4.0/ This is an open-access article distributed under the terms of the Creative Commons Attribution License, which permits unrestricted use, distribution, and reproduction in any medium, provided the original author and source are properly credited.
spellingShingle Research Article
Dambuza, Ivy
Keeton, Roanne
Allie, Nasiema
Hsu, Nai-Jen
Randall, Philippa
Sebesho, Boipelo
Fick, Lizette
Quesniaux, Valerie J. F.
Jacobs, Muazzam
Reactivation of M. tuberculosis Infection in Trans-Membrane Tumour Necrosis Factor Mice
title Reactivation of M. tuberculosis Infection in Trans-Membrane Tumour Necrosis Factor Mice
title_full Reactivation of M. tuberculosis Infection in Trans-Membrane Tumour Necrosis Factor Mice
title_fullStr Reactivation of M. tuberculosis Infection in Trans-Membrane Tumour Necrosis Factor Mice
title_full_unstemmed Reactivation of M. tuberculosis Infection in Trans-Membrane Tumour Necrosis Factor Mice
title_short Reactivation of M. tuberculosis Infection in Trans-Membrane Tumour Necrosis Factor Mice
title_sort reactivation of m. tuberculosis infection in trans-membrane tumour necrosis factor mice
topic Research Article
url https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pmc/articles/PMC3221652/
https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pubmed/22132068
http://dx.doi.org/10.1371/journal.pone.0025121
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