| Literature DB >> 33953722 |
Stefanie Krug1, Sadiya Parveen1, William R Bishai1.
Abstract
Following infection with Mycobacterium tuberculosis, the causative agent of tuberculosis (TB), most human hosts are able to contain the infection and avoid progression to active TB disease through expression of a balanced, homeostatic immune response. Proinflammatory mechanisms aiming to kill, slow and sequester the pathogen are key to a successful host response. However, an excessive or inappropriate pro-inflammatory response may lead to granuloma enlargement and tissue damage, which may prolong the TB treatment duration and permanently diminish the lung function of TB survivors. The host also expresses certain anti-inflammatory mediators which may play either beneficial or detrimental roles depending on the timing of their deployment. The balance between the timing and expression levels of pro- and anti-inflammatory responses plays an important role in the fate of infection. Interestingly, M. tuberculosis appears to manipulate both sides of the human immune response to remodel the host environment for its own benefit. Consequently, therapies which modulate either end of this spectrum of immune responses at the appropriate time may have the potential to improve the treatment of TB or to reduce the formation of permanent lung damage after microbiological cure. Here, we highlight host-directed TB therapies targeting pro- or anti-inflammatory processes that have been evaluated in pre-clinical models. The repurposing of already available drugs known to modulate these responses may improve the future of TB therapy.Entities:
Keywords: MDSCs; MMPs (metalloproteinases); PARP inhibition (PARPi); diphtheria fusion protein toxin; host-directed therapies; immunotherapy; tuberculosis
Year: 2021 PMID: 33953722 PMCID: PMC8089478 DOI: 10.3389/fimmu.2021.660916
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Front Immunol ISSN: 1664-3224 Impact factor: 7.561
Figure 1Both pro- and ani-inflammatory responses play critical roles in TB pathogenesis. (Left) Proinflammatory responses and tissue remodeling in TB are important for bacterial clearance but may lead to excessive inflammation and persisting lung damage. Adjunct modulation of lung remodeling (for example, via TNFα or MMP inhibition) or inflammation (for example, by corticosteroids) may improve the outcome of TB therapy. Inhibition of PARP1, an essential NF-κB, TNFα and MMP cofactor and driver of lung inflammation, may be similarly beneficial. (Right) Anti-inflammatory responses safeguard against tissue damage but may result in less than desirable bacterial clearance. These responses are often mediated by immunosuppressive cell populations, such as MDSCs, Tregs and M2 macrophages. Inhibition or elimination of these cell types may be achieved using the inhibitors shown. This figure was created using BioRender.
Immune-modulatory drugs that may improve TB therapy.
| Drug | HDT Class | Host Target | Applications | Preclinical data in TB | Ref. |
|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| Doxycycline | MMP Inhibitors | Multiple MMPs | Bacterial infections | Improved TB containment in cells, guinea pigs; Phase II trial ongoing (NCT02774993) | ( |
| Marimastat | MMP Inhibitors | Multiple (MMP-1, -2, -7, -9, -14) | Cancer (discontinued) | Improved TB containment in mice | ( |
| Andecaliximab | MMP Inhibitors | MMP-9 | Cancer, auto-inflammatory disorders (in development) | Reduced relapse rates in mice | ( |
| Cipemastat | MMP Inhibitors | MMP-1, -8, -13 | Rheumatoid arthritis (discontinued) | Increased lung damage and death in mice; no effect in rabbits | ( |
| Etanercept | TNF antagonists | TNFα | Arthritis (various forms), ankylosing spondylitis | Accelerated bacterial clearance, reduced relapse rates in mice; may improve outcome in TB-HIV patients (Phase I) or severely ill TB patients; risk of impaired bacterial containment without adequate anti-TB therapy | ( |
| Dexamethasone/Prednisolone | Corticosteroids | Broad-spectrum anti-inflammatory effects | Inflammatory and immune-mediated disorders (numerous) | Modest improvements in lung function; recommended for TB meningitis (survival benefit) but not for pulmonary TB | ( |
| Talazoparib | PARP inhibitors | PARP1/2; PARP3, PARP4, TNKS1, TNKS2 | Cancer | May reduce inflammation and TB lung damage in mice | ( |
| Olaparib | PARP inhibitors | PARP1/2; PARP3, PARP4, PARP16, TNKS1, TNKS2 | Cancer | N/A | ( |
| Rucaparib | PARP inhibitors | PARP1/2, PARP3, PARP10, TNKS1, TNKS2 | Cancer | N/A | ( |
| Niraparib | PARP inhibitors | PARP1/2, PARP3, PARP4, PARP12 | Cancer | N/A | ( |
| Metformin | MDSCs | HIF1α, CD39, CD73, AMPK-DACHi-CXCL1 | Diabetes | Reduced severity and mortality in diabetic patients | ( |
| Tasquinamod | MDSCs | S100A9 | Cancer | Decreased lung and spleen bacillary burden in mice | ( |
| ATRA | MDSCs | Upregulates glutathione synthase | Cancer | Decreased lung bacillary burden and pathology in mice and rats | ( |
| DABIL-4 | MDSCs | IL-4R | Preclinical model of breast cancer | Decreased lung bacillary burden in mice | ( |
| Sildenafil | MDSCs | PDE-5i | Erectile dysfunction and pulmonary hypertension | Reduced lung bacillary burden, pathology and severity in mice | ( |
| Roflumilast and CC-11052 | MDSCs | PDE-4i | COPD | Improved lung function in mice | ( |
| Denileukin Diftitox (Ontak®) | Tregs | IL-2R | Refractory cutaneous T-cell lymphoma | Reduced lung bacillary burden in mice | ( |
| Checkpoint blockade therapy | Tregs | CTLA4, PD1 | Cancer |
| ( |
| Curcumin | M2 macrophages | IL-10 | Preclinical models of cancer | Modest efficacy in mice | ( |
| Anti-IL-10 antibody | Tregs | IL-10 | Preclinical model of cancer | Reduced lung bacillary burden in mice | ( |
MMP, matrix metalloproteinases; TNKS, tankyrase; PDE, phosphodiesterase.