| Literature DB >> 29230217 |
Meg L Donovan1, Thomas E Schultz1, Taylor J Duke1, Antje Blumenthal1.
Abstract
Tuberculosis (TB) remains a major global health threat. Urgent needs in the fight against TB include improved and innovative treatment options for drug-sensitive and -resistant TB as well as reliable biological indicators that discriminate active from latent disease and enable monitoring of treatment success or failure. Prominent interferon (IFN) inducible gene signatures in TB patients and animal models of Mycobacterium tuberculosis infection have drawn significant attention to the roles of type I IFNs in the host response to mycobacterial infections. Here, we review recent developments in the understanding of the innate immune pathways that drive type I IFN responses in mycobacteria-infected host cells and the functional consequences for the host defense against M. tuberculosis, with a view that such insights might be exploited for the development of targeted host-directed immunotherapies and development of reliable biomarkers.Entities:
Keywords: Mycobacterium tuberculosis; cytokines; immune responses; innate immune signaling; mouse models; patients; pattern recognition receptors; type I interferon
Year: 2017 PMID: 29230217 PMCID: PMC5711827 DOI: 10.3389/fimmu.2017.01633
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Front Immunol ISSN: 1664-3224 Impact factor: 7.561
Figure 1Innate immune signaling pathways that drive type I IFN responses in mycobacteria-infected host cells. During infection, the Mycobacterium tuberculosis ESX-1 secretion system facilitates disruption of the phagosomal membrane contributing to mitochondrial stress and leakage of mycobacterial products into the cytosol. These products include the cyclic dinucleotides cyclic diadenosine monophosphate (c-di-AMP) and cyclic diguanosine monophosphate (c-di-GMP), DNA, and N-glycolylated muramyl dipeptide (MDP). Recognition of cytosolic mitochondrial and mycobacterial DNA by cyclic GMP-AMP synthase (cGAS) initiates formation of the second messenger cyclic-GMP-AMP (cGAMP). cGAMP and bacterial cyclic dinucleotides interact with dimeric STING on the endoplasmic reticulum or the STING-accessory molecule DDX41. STING activation and relocation to the perinuclear Golgi initiates recruitment and activation of TANK-binding kinase 1 (TBK1), and possibly also IKKε. Subsequent activation and nuclear translocation of the functionally active dimeric transcription factors interferon regulatory factor (IRF)3 and NF-κB drives expression of type I IFNs. cGAMP may also access uninfected cells via gap junctions, triggering STING activation and type I IFN expression in bystander cells. MDP is recognized by NOD2, which leads to RIP2-mediated activation of TBK1, culminating in IRF5 dimerization and nuclear translocation. M. tuberculosis isolate BTB 02-171 induces type I IFN expression dependent on TLR4. It is inferred that the induction pathway is similar to the known toll-like receptor (TLR)4 endosomal signaling pathway. However, this awaits experimental confirmation. Mycobacterium bovis Bacillus Calmette–Guérin (BCG) lacks ESX-1, yet, can elicit type I IFN expression. Cyclic dinucleotide-mediated STING activation independent of ESX-1 has been described.
Perturbations of type I IFN signaling in mouse models and consequences for infection with bacteria of the Mycobacterium tuberculosis complex.
| Mouse strain/Mtb susceptible (S) or resistant (R) | Type I IFN perturbation | Mycobacteria | Type I IFN response | Bacterial burden | Pathology | Survival | Reference |
|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| C57BL/6 (R) | H37Rv | Reduced IFN-β in lung homogenate 18 and 25 days p.i. | Comparable to WT on days 18 and 25 p.i. | n.d. | No mortality in WT and | ( | |
| BTB 02-171 | n.d. | Comparable to WT on days 24 and 27 p.i. | Comparable to WT at day 27 p.i. | No mortality in WT and | ( | ||
| Erdman | n.d. | Comparable to WT on days 1, 10, and 21 p.i. in the lungs. Reduced bacterial burden in spleen on days 10 and 21 p.i. | n.d. | n.d. | ( | ||
| n.d. | Reduced bacterial burden in lungs on day 292 p.i. in | Pathology diminished in | ( | ||||
| Poly-ICLC (i.n.) twice weekly for 28 days, starting (a) 1 day or (b) 4 months post infection | H37Rv | (b) Poly-ICLC increased | (a) and (b) increased bacterial burden in lungs. Was prevented in | (a) and (b) increased lung pathology | (b) reduced survival | ( | |
| Intranasal influenza A virus (a) 28 days before or (b) 1 and 14 days (2 different IVA subtypes) after Mtb infection | H37Rv | n.d. | Slightly elevated lung bacterial burden (a) 120 days (b) 27 days post Mtb infection | (a) increased lung inflammation on day 120 post Mtb infection | (a) impaired survival of mice >160 days | ( | |
| (a) No effect on lung Mtb burden on days 28/31 and 63 post Mtb infection | |||||||
| B6D2/F1 (R) | Purified mouse IFNα/β (5 days/weeks for 4 weeks) post infection | HN878 | n.d. | Higher bacterial burden in lungs at day 28 for HN878 + IFNα/β compared to HN878 only mice | n.d. | IFNα/β administration significantly impaired survival | ( |
| Anti-IFNα/β (A1AB/5; i.p. every 48 h for 4 weeks starting 24 h prior to Mtb) | HN878 | Lung IFN-α mRNA at d28 p.i. slightly elevated for anti-IFNα/β treated mice | Equal bacterial burden in lungs | n.d. | Enhanced survival of anti-IFNα/β treated mice | ( | |
| 129 (S) | H37Rv | n.d. | Slightly decreased lung bacterial burden in | Diminished pathology in | Most WT mice died within 40 days p.i., all | ( | |
| HN878 CDC1551 | n.d. | n.d. | n.d. | Small survival benefit for | ( | ||
| H37Rv | n.d. | Reduced bacterial burden in lungs of | Increased lung pathology in WT mice infected with HN878 compared to H37Rv, CDC1551 or Erdman-KO1 | Equivalent survival of | ( | ||
| C57BL/6/129 (S) | Erdman | n.d. | Slightly increased lung bacterial burden at 10, 20, and 40 days p.i. compared to WT | n.d. | n.d. | ( | |
| Comparable bacterial burden at 80 days p.i. | |||||||
| H37Rv | n.d. | n.d. | n.d. | ( | |||
| H37Rv | Slightly elevated IFN-β protein in lung homogenate of | Comparable bacterial burden in lung and MLN in | Severe pathology in | ( | |||
| BTB 02-171 | n.d. | Lung bacterial burden in | Severe pathology in | ( | |||
Ifnar1, interferon alpha receptor 1; Ifngr, interferon gamma receptor; Il-1r, interleukin 1 receptor; WT, wild-type; Mtb, M. tuberculosis; IFN, interferon; p.i., postinfection; i.n., intranasal; n.d., not determined; Poly-ICLC, polyinosinic-polycytidilic acid and poly-.
Impact of type I IFNs in patients with mycobacterial infections.
| Patients | TB | Comorbidity | Treatment | Outcome | Reference |
|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| MDR-TB, XDR-TB | |||||
| Non-tuberculous mycobacteria | |||||
| 5 patients with advanced pulmonary cavitary disease, extensive drug resistance, chronic treatment failure | XDR-TB | – | Recombinant human IFN-α-2b subcutaneous injections weekly for 12 weeks in combination with anti-TB chemotherapy | 2/5 clinical improvement, 1 year minimum six negative sputum cultures | ( |
| 1/5 transient clinical improvement, smear negative but culture positive | |||||
| 2/5 not responsive | |||||
| 7 patients non-responsive to second line chemotherapy after 6 months | MDR-TB | – | Aerosolized human IFN-α lymphoblastoid three times weekly for 9 weeks in combination with anti-TB chemotherapy | 5/7 sputum smear negative but culture positive | ( |
| 2/7 reduced sputum burden and remained culture positive | |||||
| Bacterial burden increased in all after IFN-α treatment stopped | |||||
| 20 patients, drug-sensitive pulmonary TB | TB | – | 10 patients with anti-TB chemotherapy vs. 10 patients with anti-TB chemotherapy + aerosolized IFN-α three times weekly for 2 months | Fever, bacterial load in sputum smears and high-resolution computer tomography abnormalities showed earlier resolution in IFN-α treated group | ( |
| 11 patients, pulmonary TB, isoniazid, and rifampin resistance | MDR-TB | – | 6 patients with anti-TB chemotherapy vs. 6 patients with anti-TB chemotherapy + s.c. IFN-α three times weekly for 8 weeks | 8 weeks: 5/5 sputum smear negative in IFN-α group | ( |
| 6 months: 2/5 sputum negative in IFN-α group | |||||
| 0/6 sputum negative in control group at both time points | |||||
| 48 years old male; previous treatment failure | TB | Diabetes mellitus | Co-administration of IFN-α-2a i.m. weekly for 8 months with anti-TB chemotherapy | Afebrile and body weight gain after 2 weeks, and radiological improvement after 2 months | ( |
| Radiological status stable and sputum cultures negative after 4 years | |||||
| 4 patients with disseminated disease; patients A–C had early childhood mycobacterial disease onset | Patient A: | Complete or partial IFNGR1 signaling deficiencies | Patient A: IFN-α2b three times weekly subcutaneously for 3 months | Patient A: reduction of pulmonary disease, lesions resolved after 1 year | ( |
| Patient A: 22 years old female | Patient B: MAC, | Patient B: B-cell lymphoma | Patient B: IFN-α2b 3 times weekly subcutaneously, then pegylated IFN-α | Patient B: deceased at 20 years of age, but biopsies showed no mycobacteria | |
| Patient B: 19 years old male | Patient C: | Patient C and D: alternating doses of IFN-γ and IFN-α2b subcutaneously three times weekly; all in conjunction with individualized antibacterial treatment | Patient C: gained weight, lesion healed, pleural mass decreased | ||
| Patient C: 7 years old male with Bacillus Calmette–Guérin (BCG) immunization at birth | Patient D: | Patient D: no new infections | |||
| Patient D: 52 years old female | |||||
| 12 months old female disseminated disease | MAC | Complete IFNGR1 deficiency and complete loss of functional response to exogenous IFN-γ | Co-administration of IFN-α-2b subcutaneous injections three times weekly and antimycobacterials | Mycobacteremic but clinically stable with continuation of multi-drug regimen at 58 months of age | ( |
TB, tuberculosis; MDR, multi-drug resistant; XDR, extensively drug resistant; IFN, interferon; IFNGR1, interferon-gamma receptor 1; s.c., subcutaneous; i.m., intramuscular.
Figure 2Impact of type I IFNs on protective (green) and detrimental (red) host responses in the immune-competent Mycobacterium tuberculosis-infected host. The current literature suggests that in the immune-competent host, type I IFNs suppress host-protective IFN-γ and IL-1α/β responses, as well as the recruitment of mycobacteria-restricting monocytes/macrophages. In contrast, type I IFN signaling can directly induce NO production, a contributor to effective antimycobacterial host defense. The evidence for the contributions of type I IFNs to host-protective interleukin-12 and TNF responses is currently ambiguous and may be determined by timing, dose, and source of the type I IFN response. Type I IFNs are a driver of IL-10, a cytokine that impairs antimycobacterial immune responses during all stages of infection. Type I IFN signatures in patients have been associated with neutrophils and studies in mouse models of heightened M. tuberculosis susceptibility suggest that type I IFN signaling facilitates infection of permissive neutrophils, which have been associated with damaging tissue pathology.