| Literature DB >> 19938975 |
Aurelie Cobat1, Caroline J Gallant, Leah Simkin, Gillian F Black, Kim Stanley, Jane Hughes, T Mark Doherty, Willem A Hanekom, Brian Eley, Nulda Beyers, Jean-Philippe Jaïs, Paul van Helden, Laurent Abel, Eileen G Hoal, Alexandre Alcaïs, Erwin Schurr.
Abstract
Human antimycobacterial immunity is a critical component of tuberculosis (TB) pathogenesis that is often used to infer the presence of TB infection. We report high heritability (>50%) for in vitro secretion of tumor necrosis factor alpha and interferon gamma (IFN-gamma), and the frequency of antigen-specific IFN-gamma(+)CD4(+) and IFN-gamma(+)CD8(+) cells in the response of whole blood to mycobacterial challenge. In principal component analysis, the first 3 components explain 78% of the overall variance consistent with the effect of pleiotropic regulatory genes of human antimycobacterial immunity. These results directly demonstrate the pivotal role played by host genetics in quantitative measures of antimycobacterial immunity underlying immune diagnosis of TB infection.Entities:
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Year: 2010 PMID: 19938975 DOI: 10.1086/648611
Source DB: PubMed Journal: J Infect Dis ISSN: 0022-1899 Impact factor: 5.226