Literature DB >> 25862076

Bacillary replication and macrophage necrosis are determinants of neutrophil recruitment in tuberculosis.

Teresa Repasy1, Nuria Martinez1, Jinhee Lee1, Kim West1, Wenjun Li2, Hardy Kornfeld3.   

Abstract

We previously determined that burst size necrosis is the chief mode of mononuclear cell death in the lungs of mice with tuberculosis. The present study explored the link between infection-induced necrosis of mononuclear phagocytes and neutrophil accumulation in the lungs of mice challenged with one of four Mycobacterium tuberculosis strains of increasing virulence (RvΔphoPR mutant, H37Ra, H37Rv and Erdman). At all time points studied, Erdman produced the highest bacterial load and the highest proportion and number of M. tuberculosis-infected neutrophils. These parameters, and the proportion of TUNEL-positive cells, tracked with virulence across all strains tested. Differences in neutrophil infection were not reflected by levels of chemoattractant cytokines in bronchoalveolar lavage fluid, while interferon-γ (reported to suppress neutrophil trafficking to the lung in tuberculosis) was highest in Erdman-infected mice. Treating Erdman-infected mice with ethambutol decreased the proportion of mononuclear phagocytes with high bacterial burden and the ratio of infected neutrophils to infected mononuclear cells in a dose-dependent manner. We propose that faster replicating M. tuberculosis strains cause more necrosis which in turn promotes neutrophil recruitment. Neutrophils infected with M. tuberculosis constitute a biomarker for poorly controlled bacterial replication, infection-induced mononuclear cell death, and increased severity of immune pathology in tuberculosis.
Copyright © 2015 Institut Pasteur. Published by Elsevier Masson SAS. All rights reserved.

Entities:  

Keywords:  Cell death; Macrophages; Neutrophils; Tuberculosis

Mesh:

Year:  2015        PMID: 25862076      PMCID: PMC4508221          DOI: 10.1016/j.micinf.2015.03.013

Source DB:  PubMed          Journal:  Microbes Infect        ISSN: 1286-4579            Impact factor:   2.700


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