| Literature DB >> 30889803 |
Ursula K Rohlwink1, Naomi F Walker2, Alvaro A Ordonez3,4, Yifan J Li5, Elizabeth W Tucker6,7,8, Paul T Elkington9, Robert J Wilkinson10,11,12, Katalin A Wilkinson13,14.
Abstract
Tuberculosis (TB) remains the single biggest infectious cause of death globally, claiming almost two million lives and causing disease in over 10 million individuals annually. Matrix metalloproteinases (MMPs) are a family of proteolytic enzymes with various physiological roles implicated as key factors contributing to the spread of TB. They are involved in the breakdown of lung extracellular matrix and the consequent release of Mycobacterium tuberculosis bacilli into the airways. Evidence demonstrates that MMPs also play a role in central nervous system (CNS) tuberculosis, as they contribute to the breakdown of the blood brain barrier and are associated with poor outcome in adults with tuberculous meningitis (TBM). However, in pediatric TBM, data indicate that MMPs may play a role in both pathology and recovery of the developing brain. MMPs also have a significant role in HIV-TB-associated immune reconstitution inflammatory syndrome in the lungs and the brain, and their modulation offers potential novel therapeutic avenues. This is a review of recent research on MMPs in pulmonary and CNS TB in adults and children and in the context of co-infection with HIV. We summarize different methods of MMP investigation and discuss the translational implications of MMP inhibition to reduce immunopathology.Entities:
Keywords: HIV-TB-associated IRIS; adult; central nervous system; extracellular matrix breakdown; lung; matrix metalloproteinases; pediatric; tuberculosis; tuberculous meningitis
Mesh:
Substances:
Year: 2019 PMID: 30889803 PMCID: PMC6471445 DOI: 10.3390/ijms20061350
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Int J Mol Sci ISSN: 1422-0067 Impact factor: 5.923
Summary of recent matrix metalloproteinase (MMP) studies in pulmonary tuberculosis (TB) and central nervous system (CNS) TB.
| Reference | CNS or pTB | Subjects | Samples | Method of Investigation | Analytes | Key Findings |
|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| Pulmonary TB (pTB) | ||||||
| Elkington et al. [ | pTB | Adults ( | Lung tissue from biopsy | Immunohistochemistry | MMP-1 | Study examined affected lung in MMP-1 and MMP-7 present in macrophages and Langhans giant cells in granuloma, and MMP-1 in adjacent epithelial cells, in PTB cases only |
| Kuo et al. [ | pTB | Adults ( | Blood | Genotyping | MMP-1 DNA (G-1607 GG) sequence single | MMP-1 1G genotype was associated with endobronchial TB on bronchoscopy MMP-1 1G genotypes were associated with a 9.86-fold increased risk of developing tracheobronchial stenosis, in patients with endobronchial TB |
| Wang et al. [ | pTB | Adult ( | Blood | Genotyping | MMP-1 (-1607G) polymorphism increased the risk of moderate and advanced lung fibrosis at one year in pTB cases—the odds increased by 3.80 and 6.02 fold, respectively for one copy and this remained after adjustment for age, sex, initial disease score on chest radiograph, sputum bacterial load, smoking status and presence of diabetes MMP-9 and -12 polymorphisms were not associated with increased risk of developing lung fibrosis | |
| Ganachari et al. [ | pTB | Adults ( | Blood | Genotyping | -2518A>G SNP in MCP-1 (rs1024611) |
MMP-1 allele 2G associated with TB disease MMP-1 2G/2G genotype associated with increased lymph node MMP-1 in active TB cases compared to other genotypes |
| Elkington et al. [ | pTB | Adults ( | Induced sputum and BAL | Luminex (concentrations normalized to total protein) | MMP-1 |
MMP-1, -3: pTB > controls MMP-2, -8, -9, -12, TIMP-1 and-2: pTB ≈ controls MMP-13, TIMP-3 and -4 undetectable |
| Walker et al. [ | pTB | Adults ( | Induced sputum | Luminex (concentrations normalized to total protein) | MMP-1 |
MMP-1, -2, -3, -8: pTB > controls irrespective of HIV status MMP-7 and -9: pTB ≈ controls MMP-12 and -13 undetectable In advanced HIV (CD4 < 200), pTB patients had relatively lower sputum MMP-1, -2, -8 and -9 MMP-1 and -2 increased in pTB patients with cavities versus no cavities, and correlated with chest x-ray inflammation score |
| Ganachari et al. [ | pTB | Adults ( | Blood | Genotyping | -2518A>G SNP in |
Greater proportion of patients with severe disease carried the two locus genoype -2518 |
| Seddon et al. [ | pTB | Adults ( | Induced sputum | Luminex | MMP-1 |
Plasma PIIINP correlated with radiographic inflammation score and sputum MMP-1 in pTB Plasma MMP-8 and PIIINP predictive of pTB diagnosis, AUC of 0.82 (95% confidence interval 0.742–0.922, |
| Ugarte-Gil et al. [ | pTB | Adults ( | Induced sputum | Luminex (adjusted for total protein) | MMP-1 |
MMP-1, -2, -3, -8, and -9: pTB cases > controls TIMP-1 and -2: pTB cases > controls Sputum MMP concentrations decreased with TB treatment but TIMP concentrations initially rose Elevated sputum MMP-2, -8, -9 and TIMP-2 at TB diagnosis, and elevated sputum MMP-3, MMP-8 and TIMP-1 at two weeks were associated with two-week sputum culture positivity |
| Kubler et al. [ | pTB | Adults ( | Plasma | ELISA | MMP-1 |
MMP-1/TIMP1-4 ratios: pTB > latent TB and healthy controls |
| Singh et al. [ | pTB | Adults ( | BAL Fluid | Not specified | MMP-1 |
median MMP-1, -2, -3, -7, -8, and -9: pTB cases > controls |
| Chen et al. [ | Pleural TB | Adults ( | Pleural fluid | ELISA | MMP-1 |
Elevated TNF-α, MMP-1 and -9, which correlated with the size of the effusion in cases MMP-7: cases ≈ controls TNF-α and MMP-1 positively correlated with degree of pleural fibrosis at 6 months in cases |
| Sathyamoorthy et al. * [ | pTB | Adults ( | Plasma | Luminex | MMP-1 |
Plasma MMP-8: pTB cases > respiratory symptomatic and healthy controls MMP-1: pTB cases > healthy controls only Gender specific differences in MMPs: MMP-8 in men > women |
| Lee et al. [ | pTB | Adults ( | Blood | Luminex | MMP-1 |
26 cases were smear positive at 2 months (15.6%) RANTES concentration at diagnosis and MMP-8 concentration at 2 months predicted 2-month culture status, AUC: 0.725 (0.624–0.827), and 0.632 (0.512–0.753) respectively |
| Andrade et al. * [ | pTB | Brazilian adults ( | Plasma | Luminex and ELISA | MMP-1 |
MMP-1 (Brazilian cohort) and HO-1 (Indian cohort) were elevated but inversely related (both cohorts) in PTB patients compared to healthy controls (including those with latent TB infection) MMP-1: pTB > sarcoid but pTB ≈ NTM (in American cohort) |
| Ong et al. [ | pTB | Adults ( | Lung biopsies | Immunohistochemistry | H&E and anti-neutrophil elastase |
MMP-8 co-localized with neutrophils at the inner surface of TB cavities Neutrophils were also immunoreactive for MMP-9 Neutrophil activation markers MPO and NGAL: pTB cases > controls and strongly correlated with sputum MMP-8 Sputum MMP-8: cavities > no cavities Induced sputum collagenase activity: pTB cases > controls Collagenase activity correlates with MMP-8 concentration and is reduced by MMP-8 neutralization |
| Sathyamoorthy et al. [ | pTB | Adults ( | Induced sputum | RT-PCR | MT-MMP-1 (MMP-14) |
MT-MMP-1 RNA: pTB cases > controls Granuloma cell MT-MMP-1 immunoreactivity: pTB cases > controls—only alveolar macrophages were positive |
| Brilha et al. [ | pTB | Adult PTB vs control (respiratory symptomatic and healthy) | Induced sputum and BAL | Luminex for MMP concentrations, RT-PCR for RNA | MMP-10 |
Induced sputum secreted MMP-10 and MMP-10 RNA: pTB cases > controls BAL MMP-10: pTB cases > controls |
| Fox et al. [ | pTB | Peruvian cohort: Plasma from adults ( | Plasma and BAL Fluid | Luminex | MMP-9 and platelet-derived growth factor (PDGF)-BB, RANTES, P-selectin, platelet factor-4 (PF4), Pentraxin-3 (PTX3) |
Plasma MMP-9 correlated with platelet factors, PF4, PDGF-BB and PTX3 In BAL fluid, P-selectin concentrations correlated with IL-1β, MMP-1, -3, -7, -8, and -9; PDGF-BB concentrations correlated with MMP-1, -3, -8, and -9; RANTES concentrations correlated with MMP-1, -8, and -9 as well as IL-1β |
| Singh et al. [ | pTB | Adults ( | Lung tissue | Immunohistochemistry | MMP-3 |
IL-17 and MMP-3: pTB > control tissue |
| Tuberculous meningitis (TBM) | ||||||
| Matsuura et al. [ | CNS | Adults ( | CSF | Gelatin zymography | MMP-9 |
MMP-9, -2 and TIMP-1: cases > controls TIMP-2: cases ~ controls MMPs correlated positively with respective TIMPs No correlations between analytes and proteins/cell counts MMP-9 and TIMP-1 concentrations positively associated with neurological complications |
| Price et al. [ | CNS | Human monocytic (THP-1) cells (in-vitro study) | CSF | Northern Blot | MMP-9 | MMP-9 secretion increased in TB-infected cells at 24 h (compared to controls) No difference in TIMP-1 secretion between TB-infected cells and controls at 24 h (suggesting net proteolytic activity). Moderate increase (5× compared to controls) at 48 h MMP-9 mRNA—undetectable in controls, detected at 24 h in TB-infected cells and increased at 48 h TIMP-1 mRNA—detected in controls. Only moderate increase at 48 h in infected cells MMP-9 activity in TBM > other meningitides MMP/CSF leukocyte ratio in TBM > other meningitides MMP-9/CSF leukocyte ratio positively associated with neurological complications MMP-2 was constitutionally expressed in the CSF, not affected by infection TIMP-1 was not significantly elevated compared to other meningitides or controls |
| Thwaites et al. [ | CNS | Adults ( | CSF | ELISA | MMP-9 | Measured pre- and post-treatment analyte concentrations: All patients received streptomycin (20 mg/kg intramuscularly daily; maximum, 1 g) and an oral regimen of 5 mg/kg isoniazid, 10 mg/kg rifampicin, and 30 mg/ kg pyrazinamide for 3 months, followed by 3 drugs (isoniazid, rifampicin, and pyrazinamide) for 6 months Pre-treatment: MMP-9 = 146 ng/mL, TIMP-1 = 463 ng/mL Post-treatment: MMP-9 = 70 ng/mL ( MMP-9 was not associated with outcome post-treatment was not significantly different to pre-treatment concentrations |
| Lee et al. [ | CNS | Adults ( | CSF | ELISA | MMP-9 | Measured MMP concentrations early (<7 days after treatment) and late (after 7 days of treatment—range 10–106 days) MMP-9: early = 74 ng/mL, late = 123 ng/mL MMP-2: early = 75 ng/mL, late = 120 ng/mL Both MMP-9 and -2 appear to increase temporally (after treatment), but not evaluated statistically MMP-9 and -2 significantly higher in patients with delayed neurological complications ( MMP-9 correlated with CSF protein and white cell count |
| Green et al. [ | CNS | Adults ( | CSF | ELISA | MMP-1 | Study compared the effect of dexamethasone on analyte concentrations relative to a placebo group. Concentrations were measured pre-treatment, on day 5 (3–8), day 30, 60, and 270 Significant decrease in MMP-9 early in dexamethasone treatment (day 5, No relationship found between early decrease in MMP-9 and outcome Did not find any relationship between pre-treatment MMP or TIMP concentrations and outcome, except: lower MMP-2 associated with hemiparesis ( MMP-9 correlated with CSF neutrophil count ( |
| Rai et al. [ | CNS | Adults ( | CSF | ELISA | MMP-2 | TBM case MMP > Controls for HIV− and HIV+ MMP-2 and -9 concentrations not associated with patient outcome MMP-2 associated with visual impairment Control: 60.5 (47.1–69.5) HIV− TBM: 77.3 (38.8–221.9) HIV+ TBM: 83.2 (48.8–286.5) HIV− versus HIV+ Control: 466.8 (432.1–986) HIV− TBM: 4962.2 (200–5966) HIV+ TBM: 3476.2 (491–5999.4) HIV− versus HIV+ |
| Marais et al. [ | CNS | Adults ( | CSF | Luminex | MMP-1 | CSF was analyzed 3–5 time points in HIV-TBM ( MMP-9 and TIMP-1 were elevated in CSF at TBM diagnosis, while MMP-1, -3, -7, and -10 were significantly higher in blood HIV-TBM patients who subsequently developed TBM-IRIS showed significantly elevated MMP-1, MMP-7, MMP-10, TIMP-1 and TIMP-2 in the baseline CSF, compared to those who did not |
| Majeed et al. [ | CNS | C6 glioma cells (in-vitro study) | CSF | Zymography | MMP-9 | MMP-9: infected cells > uninfected cells Both drugs decreased MMP-9 concentrations CSF and serum MMP-9: cases > controls for all 3 stages higher MMP-9 concentrations at more severe TBM stages CSF TIMP-1 detectable in controls and stage I TBM only. Serum TIMP undetectable MMP-9 (ng/mL) MMP-9 (ng/mL) |
| Marais et al. [ | CNS | Adults ( | RNA from blood, | Microarray analysis (RNA) | >47,000 probes |
Whole blood transcriptional signature confirmed elevated MMP-8 and MMP-9, with MMP-9 elevated at protein level in baseline CSF in TBM-IRIS patients MMP-9 transcript remained elevated despite anti-TB and anti-inflammatory (prednisone) treatment in TBM-IRIS patients, possibly leading to degradation of the extracellular matrix as a mechanism of tissue damage in the central nervous system that is systemically reflected in the blood |
| Mailankody et al. [ | CNS | Adults ( | CSF | ELISA | MMP-9 |
MMP-9 positively correlated with GCS ( MMP-9 negatively correlated with CSF glucose ( MMP-9 did not correlate with Q-alb or CSF neutrophil count Higher median MMP-9 in patients with good outcome (254 ng/mL) compared to bad outcome (192 ng/mL), but not significant |
| Li et al. [ | CNS | Children | CSF | Luminex | MMP-9 | First study to measure MMP (and TIMP) concentrations in children with TBM Persistently elevated gelatinase (and inhibitor) concentrations in paediatric TBM MMP-9 levels decreased early in response to TB treatment (including steroid usage), but increased later during the treatment phase No correlation between admission gelatinase levels and Q-alb, clinical characteristics or poor outcomes Better outcomes (risk ratio 2.1, 95% CI 1.23–3.53, |
Data presented as mean ± standard deviation or median (range) depending on information available from the study. * Provide diagnostic accuracy analysis. Matrix metalloproteinase (MMP), tissue inhibitor of matrix metalloproteinase (TIMP), Enzyme-linked immunosorbent assay (ELISA), broncho-alveolar lavage (BAL), interleukin (IL), cerebrospinal fluid (CSF). Anti-retroviral therapy (ART). Area under the curve (AUC). Cross-linked C-telopeptide of type I (CTX-I) and type III (CTX-III) collagen. Extracellular matrix metalloproteinase inducer (EMMPRIN). Procollagen I N-terminal propeptide (PINP). Procollagen III N-terminal propeptide (PIIINP). Procollagen III C-terminal propeptide (PIIICP). Platelet-derived growth factor-BB (PDGF-BB). Platelet factor-4 (PF4). Pentraxin-3 (PTX3). Receiver operating characteristics (ROC). Tumour necrosis factor (TNF). Regulated upon Activation, Normal T cell Expressed, and Secreted (RANTES). Membrane type (MT). Monocyte chemoattractant protein 1 (MCP-1). Haematoxylin and Eosin (H&E). Single nucleotide polymorphism (SNP). Albumin quotient (Q-alb).
Figure 1MMPs contribute to extracellular matrix (ECM) destruction in pulmonary TB (pTB). Lung TB granulomas comprise mycobacterium tuberculosis (Mtb) infected macrophages (purple), dendritic cells (beige), T (blue) and B (green) lymphocytes, and neutrophils (orange). These cells secrete numerous MMPs including MMP-1, -3, -7, -9, and -10, which may act in a proteolytic cascade. Evidence demonstrates their association with lung ECM breakdown, necrosis, and pTB disease severity. MMP-1 drives degradation of fibrillary type I, III, and IV collagen and is the key pulmonary collagenase. Neutrophil derived MMP-8 also contributes to collagen degradation, and both MMP-1 and -8 are involved in cavity formation, which facilitates the transmission of Mtb by releasing the bacilli into the airways. Hypoxia augments monocyte and neutrophil MMP secretion acting through the hypoxia inducible factor (HIF)-1α transcription factor, an important regulator of the host response to oxygen deprivation. Mtb also promotes MMP activity via cellular networks involving immune and stromal cells. For example, lung fibroblasts have demonstrated upregulated MMP gene expression in response to Mtb infection or in the presence of monocytes infected with Mtb and MMP-1 secretion in response to Mtb-induced TNF-α.
Figure 2MMPs contribute to extracellular matrix (ECM) destruction in CNS TB. Mtb bacilli cross the protective blood brain barrier (BBB) through various mechanisms, including in infected monocytes. In the presence of these infected monocytes and driven by TNF-α and interleukin (IL)-1β, brain microglia and astrocytes respond as part of a leukocyte-microglia and leukocyte-astrocyte interaction by secreting MMP-1, -2, and -9, and MMP-1 and -3, respectively. These MMPs contribute to the breakdown of ECM proteins of the brain parenchyma, including fibronectin, laminin-α1, collagen type IV, and proteoglycans, and are pro-apoptotic to neurons (indicated in red text as “cell death”) with the resultant tissue destruction adding to the cerebral inflammatory response. MMP-9 is also known to attack myelin basic protein (MBP), an integral component of the myelin sheath insulating neurons. Further, MMPs degrade claudin-5 and occludin, thereby compromising the tight BBB and contributing to the influx of proteins and water resulting in vasogenic edema, as well as further blood-derived inflammatory cells, including neutrophils. Neutrophils secrete MMP-9 in the parenchyma as well as in TB granulomas (tuberculomas), in which Mtb-infected microglia have also been found to secrete MMP-1 and -3. Contrary to the other MMPs, MMP-2 expression is suppressed through cytokines like TNF-α. Up-arrow indicates increased concentrations, down-arrow indicates decreased concentrations.
Evaluation of MMP inhibitors in pulmonary TB animal models.
| MMP Inhibitor | Animal Model | Treatment Started * | Combination Therapy | Results in Treated Group Compared to Controls | Reference | |||
|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| Lung CFU | Lung Pathology | Mortality | Other Findings in Treated Group | |||||
| Batimastat | Mouse (Balb/c) | Day 1 | No | NR | + | + | Lower TNF-α, IL-2 and IL-1α. Higher IL-4 | [ |
| Day 30 | No | NR | = | = | No difference in TNF-α, IL-2 and IL-4. Higher IL-1α in pneumonic areas. | [ | ||
| Mouse (C57BL/6) | Day 18 | No | − | −/= a | NR | Decreased leukocytes. No differences in IFN-γ, IL-4, IL-12, TNF-α and IL-10. Less CFU in blood. | [ | |
| Day 1 | No | = | NR | NR | Less CFU in spleen and blood by day 14. | [ | ||
| Day 7 | Isoniazid | − | NR | NR | [ | |||
| Cipemastat | Mouse (C3HeB/FeJ) | Day 1 | No | = | + | + | Higher rate of cavitation | [ |
| Rabbit (New Zealand white) | Day 35 | No | NR | + | NR | Higher rate of cavitation. No differences in disease severity by gross pathology or histology | [ | |
| Marimastat | Mouse (C57BL/6) | Day 7 | No | = | = | NR | [ | |
| Day 7 | Isoniazid | − | − | NR | Improved stability of blood vessels surrounding TB lesions | [ | ||
| Prinomastat | Mouse (C57BL/6) | Day 7 | Isoniazid | = | NR | NR | [ | |
| SB-3CT | Mouse (C57BL/6) | Day 7 | Isoniazid | − | NR | NR | [ | |
| MMP-9 inhibitor I | Mouse (C57BL/6) | Day 7 | Isoniazid | − | NR | NR | [ | |
| Anti MMP-9 antibody | Mouse (C3HeB/FeJ) | Day 42 | Rifampin, isoniazid and pyrazinamide | − | − | NR | Less relapse rates after 12 weeks of treatment | [ |
| CC-3052 | Rabbit (New Zealand white) | Day 28 | No | = | + | NR | Worse disease compared to untreated controls | [ |
| Day 28 | Isoniazid | − | − | NR | Less inflammation and fibrosis compared to isoniazid monotherapy controls | [ | ||
| Doxycycline | Guinea pig | Day 14 | No | − | − | NR | No MMP-specific effect of doxycycline was identified | [ |
* Days post-infection with M. tuberculosis, (−) equals less disease, (+) equals worse disease, (=) no change. NR = not reported, a Smaller pulmonary granulomas with more collagen deposition by day 40. No difference in pathology compared to controls by day 60. b Phosphodiesterase-4 inhibitor. Tumor necrosis factor (TNF), interleukin (IL), colony forming units (CFU).