| Literature DB >> 23213506 |
Daniel S Smyk1, Dimitrios P Bogdanos, Albert Pares, Christos Liaskos, Charalambos Billinis, Andrew K Burroughs, Eirini I Rigopoulou.
Abstract
Primary biliary cirrhosis (PBC) is a progressive cholestatic liver disease characterised serologically by cholestasis and the presence of high-titre antimitochondrial antibodies, and histologically by chronic nonsuppurative cholangitis and granulomata. As PBC is a granulomatous disease and Mycobacterium tuberculosis is the most frequent cause of granulomata, a causal relation between tuberculosis and PBC has been suggested. Attempts to find serological evidence of PBC-specific autoantibodies such as AMA have been made and, conversely, granulomatous livers from patients with PBC have been investigated for molecular evidence of Mycobacterium tuberculosis. This paper discusses in detail the reported data in support or against an association between Mycobacterium tuberculosis infection and PBC. We discuss the immunological and microbiological data exploring the association of PBC with exposure to Mycobacterium tuberculosis. We also discuss the findings of large epidemiologic studies investigating the association of PBC with preexistent or concomitant disorders and the relevance of these findings with tuberculosis. Genome-wide association studies in patients with tuberculosis as well as in patients with PBC provide conclusive hints regarding the assumed association between exposure to this mycobacterium and the induction of PBC. Analysis of these data suggest that Mycobacterium tuberculosis is an unlikely infectious trigger of PBC.Entities:
Year: 2012 PMID: 23213506 PMCID: PMC3504403 DOI: 10.1155/2012/218183
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Tuberc Res Treat ISSN: 2090-150X
Summary of the major findings of studies investigating the role of Mycobacterium tuberculosis as a trigger of PBC. The findings are presented in relation to Koch's postulates. To date, no conclusive evidence has been presented which links Mycobacterium tuberculosis with PBC.
| Koch's postulates | Finding | Study |
|---|---|---|
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| Positive staining for mycobacterial hsp65 in PBC cases has been demonstrated, but hsp65 is conserved among all mycobacterial species and it is unclear whether this staining is | [ |
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| No such data exist | |
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| No such data exist |
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| No such data exist | |
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| PBC specific AMA was detected in 43% of tuberculosis patients, but in low titres, and did not show the typical indirect immunofluorescent patterns of antimitochondrial antibodies seen in PBC. These patients do not have clinical features of PBC. | [ |
Major susceptibility genes associated with tuberculosis [141, 142] and primary biliary cirrhosis [133–140], as reported through genome wide association studies. Note that no positive associations are significantly shared between primary biliary cirrhosis (PBC) and pulmonary tuberculosis (TB).
| Gene | PBC | TB |
|---|---|---|
| HLA | ||
| DR8 | + | − |
| DQB1 | + | − |
| DRB1 | + | − |
| DQA1 | + | − |
| DQA2 | + | − |
| Non-HLA | ||
| STAT4 | + | − |
| SPIB | + | − |
| IRF5 | + | − |
| IL12A | + | − |
| IL12RB | + | − |
| MMEL1 | + | − |
| CXCR5 | + | − |
| NFKB1 | + | − |
| JAG1 | − | + |
| DYNLRB2 | − | + |
| EBF1 | − | + |
| TMEFF2 | − | + |
| CCL17 | − | + |
| HAUS6 | − | + |
| PENK | − | + |
| TXNDC4 | − | + |