| Literature DB >> 34093524 |
Daniela E Kirwan1, Deborah L W Chong1, Jon S Friedland1.
Abstract
In 2019 10 million people developed symptomatic tuberculosis (TB) disease and 1.2 million died. In active TB the inflammatory response causes tissue destruction, which leads to both acute morbidity and mortality. Tissue destruction in TB is driven by host innate immunity and mediated via enzymes, chiefly matrix metalloproteinases (MMPs) which are secreted by leukocytes and stromal cells and degrade the extracellular matrix. Here we review the growing evidence implicating platelets in TB immunopathology. TB patients typically have high platelet counts, which correlate with disease severity, and a hypercoagulable profile. Platelets are present in human TB granulomas and platelet-associated gene transcripts are increased in TB patients versus healthy controls. Platelets most likely drive TB immunopathology through their effect on other immune cells, particularly monocytes, to lead to upregulation of activation markers, increased MMP secretion, and enhanced phagocytosis. Finally, we consider current evidence supporting use of targeted anti-platelet agents in the treatment of TB due to growing interest in developing host-directed therapies to limit tissue damage and improve treatment outcomes. In summary, platelets are implicated in TB disease and contribute to MMP-mediated tissue damage via their cellular interactions with other leukocytes, and are potential targets for novel host-directed therapies.Entities:
Keywords: anti-platelet drugs; inflammation; innate immunity; lung fibrosis; platelets; tuberculosis
Mesh:
Substances:
Year: 2021 PMID: 34093524 PMCID: PMC8170316 DOI: 10.3389/fimmu.2021.631696
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Front Immunol ISSN: 1664-3224 Impact factor: 7.561
Figure 1A summary of cellular interactions between platelets and monocyte during M.tb infection and actions of anti-platelet therapies. Platelets may be able to directly sense M.tb infection (step 1) via TLR2 and TLR4 to become activated and degranulate to release pro-inflammatory cytokines (step 2). Activated platelets upregulate surface P-selectin expression and bind to PSGL1 on monocytes (step 3) leading to PMA formation (step 4). Ligation of PSGL1 can initiate signal transduction via MAPK and induce gene expression (step 4) to result in cellular functional outcomes such as MMP and cytokine production or phagocytosis (step 5). Anti-platelet agents such as non-steroidal anti-inflammatory drugs (NSAIDs) and P2Y12 inhibitors (shown in red) may exhibit direct anti-mycobacterial activity on M.tb or block the actions of platelets to decrease PMA formation and MMP expression that cause collateral host tissue damage. This figure was created with images adapted from Servier Medical Art by Servier. Original images are licensed under a Creative Commons Attribution 3.0 Unported License.
Animal and human studies investigating the effects of anti-platelet agents in tuberculosis.
| Reference | Anti-platelet agent(s) tested | Host species/patients studied | Intervention | Summary of findings |
|---|---|---|---|---|
|
| ||||
| Shroff | Indomethacin | Swiss white mice | Six intraperitoneal injections of indomethacin, 50µg per mouse, given at 12 hour intervals; immunization with intraperitoneal | Indomethacin-treated mice showed a delayed type hypersensitivity response, whereas non-treated mice did not. |
| Hernández-Pando | Indomethacin | Male 6-8 week old BALB/c mice immunized with culture filtrate proteins (CFP) from H37Rv M.tb delivered | 20mg/kg cyclophosphamide or 5mg/kg indomethacin given by intraperitoneal injection one day prior to endotracheal challenge with CFP | Induction of granulomas with sepharose beads coated with CFP reduced antibody production and delayed-type hypersensitivity responses to mycobacterial antigens; this was reversed with the administration of cyclophosphamide and indomethacin. |
| Rangel Moreno | Niflumic acid | Male 6-8 week old BALB/c mice infected with H37Rv M.tb | 500µg/ml niflumic acid given by intragastric cannula twice per day | Mice treated with niflumic acid early in infection produced greater expression of TNF-α, IL-1α, and IFN-γ, with a reduction in inhaled nitric oxide synthase (iNOS) expression and an increased bacterial load. Mice treated after 60 days of infection showed increased pro-inflammatory cytokine concentrations, a striking increment of iNOS expression, and reduced bacillary load. |
| Dutta | Diclofenac sodium | 45 mycobacterial strains including drug-sensitive and -resistant strains in Kirchner’s liquid culture medium; male Swiss Albino mice infected | Mycobacteria were tested with increasing concentrations of diclofenac sodium. Infected mice were injected with 10mg/kg diclofenac sodium daily for 6 weeks | Diclofenac sodium exhibited bactericidal activity in most mycobacterial strains at a range of 15-25µg/ml. Diclofenac sodium treatment of infected mice resulted in reduced macroscopic lesions and a reduction in mycobacterial load. |
| Hernández-Pando | Niflumic acid (a COX-2 inhibitor) and soluble betaglycan (an anti-TGF-β agent) | Male 6-8 week old BALB/c mice infected with H37Rv M.tb | 30µg soluble betaglycan administered twice a week by intraperitoneal route from 30 days post infection, with/without 500µg niflumic acid administered twice a day by intragastric cannulation, or pan-specific TGF-β antibodies. Mice euthanased at 15, 30, 45, and 60 days | Compared to control animals, treatment produced higher expression of TNF‐α, IFN‐γ, IL‐2, iNOS and lower expression of IL‐4, with decreased lung fibrosis and bacillary load; there was a higher inflammatory response manifested as a greater area of lung affected by pneumonia. The addition of niflumic acid was synergistic, with reduced bacillary load and increased TNF‐α. |
| Byrne | Aspirin and ibuprofen | BALB/c mice infected with M.tb H37Rv by aerosol administration | Oral treatment of aspirin (10, 20, 40 mg/kg) and ibuprofen (10, 20, 40 mg/kg) +/- pyrazinamide (150 mg/kg) daily for 1 month | Aspirin and ibuprofen had no effect alone, but increased bactericidal activity of pyrazinamide when given in combination. |
| Byrne | Aspirin and ibuprofen | Four week old BALB/c mice infected with M.tb H37Rv by aerosol administration | Aspirin or ibuprofen (10-40mg/kg) with or without isoniazid (25mg/kg) administered by oral gavage five times per week for one month. Mice were euthanized one day after treatment completion | Co-administration of aspirin and isoniazid antagonized the antimycobacterial activity of isoniazid. Ibuprofen had no interaction with isoniazid. |
| Dutta | Diclofenac | Male Swiss Albino mice infected | Infected mice treated with diclofenac 10µg/g or streptomycin 150µg/g, alone or in combination, daily for 4 weeks | Diclofenac and streptomycin both resulted in improved survival, reduced bacillary count, and reduced splenic weight. The two drugs acted synergistically |
| Peres-Buzalaf | Celecoxib and MK-886 (5-LO activation protein inhibitor) | Male 5-8 week old BALB/c mice infected intratracheally with M.tb H37Rv strain | Oral treatment with celecoxib 5mg/kg/0.5ml, and/or MK-886 5mg/kg/0.5ml, 1h prior to infection with M.tb and again every 24h for 60 days | Celecoxib enhanced 60-day survival from 86% to 100% and reduced lung bacterial burden; conversely, MK-886 reduced 60-day survival from 86% to 43% and increased lung bacterial load. |
| Vilaplana | Ibuprofen | C3HeB/FeJ pathogen-free mice infected intravenously with M.tb H37Rv | Ibuprofen 80mg/kg given orally 3 or 4 weeks post infection. | Ibuprofen treated animals had a reduction in size and number of lung lesions, bacillary load, and improved survival. |
| Marzo | Aspirin and ibuprofen | C3HeB/FeJ and C3H/HeN pathogen-free mice infected intravenously with M.tb H37Rv | Aspirin 3mg/kg, sodium heparin 20 UI/kg, ibuprofen 80mg/kg orally | Aspirin administration reduced bacterial load, attenuated the severity of histopathological changes, and improved survival. Aspirin and ibuprofen-treated C3HeB/FeJ and C3H/HeN mice had lower levels of pro-inflammatory mediators including TNF-a, IL-6, IL-17 and CXCL5 than untreated C3HeB/FeJ mice. |
| Kroesen | Aspirin | C3HeB/FeJ infected with M.tb H37Rv Pasteur strain | Aspirin 3mg/kg given alone or in combination with anti-TB treatment | Low-dose aspirin reduced bacterial load and increased survival, reduced lung pathology, decreased production of pro-inflammatory cytokines and delayed neutrophil recruitment and T cell responses. In combination with anti-TB treatment aspirin enhanced survival and reduced lung pathology. |
| Hortle | Aspirin, and tirofiban and eptifibatide (specific inhibitors of glycoprotein IIb/IIIa–fibrinogen binding) | Zebrafish infected with | Infected zebrafish treated with 10µg/ml aspirin, 20µg/ml tirofiban, 10uM eptifibatide, or 5uM warfarin, or control | Mycobacterial burden correlated with thrombocyte density. Aspirin, tirofiban, and eptifibatide reduced mycobacterial burden by inhibiting thrombocyte-granuloma interactions. |
| Mortensen | Celecoxib and ibuprofen | CB6F1 mice infected with M.tb Erdman strain | Celecoxib or ibuprofen administered orally in mouse feed 4-12 weeks post infection | Aerosol-infected mice treated with celecoxib or ibuprofen had higher bacillary burdens in lung and spleen and there was no difference in pulmonary immune cell infiltration or cytokine levels measured in plasma or lung homogenates. Celecoxib led to increased bacterial burden and altered function/differentiation of Type 1 helper T cells in mice re-infected following antibiotic treatment. IV-infected mice had reduced inflammation and bacterial burden following ibuprofen treatment. |
|
| ||||
| Misra | Aspirin | Patients with TB meningitis diagnosed based on clinical, magnetic resonance imaging (MRI), and cerebrospinal fluid (CSF) criteria | 118 patients randomized to receive 150mg aspirin per day or placebo. All patients received standard treatment with rifampicin, isoniazid, pyrazinamide and ethambutol with/without corticosteroids | Aspirin resulted in insignificantly fewer strokes (24.2% versus 43.3%, OR 0.42, 95%CI 0.121-1.39) and significantly reduced mortality (21.7% versus 43.4%, p=0.02) compared to placebo. Aspirin was well tolerated. |
| Schoeman | Aspirin | Children with TB meningitis | 146 children randomized to placebo, low-dose aspirin (75mg/day), and high-dose (100mg/kg/day) aspirin, alongside standard treatment plus prednisolone for the first month of treatment | There was no benefit in morbidity or mortality. |
| Mai | Aspirin | HIV-uninfected adults with TB meningitis | 120 patients randomized to aspirin (81mg/day or 1000mg/day) or placebo added to the first 60 days of anti-tuberculosis drugs plus dexamethasone | There was no difference in rates of gastro-intestinal or cerebral bleeding, new brain infarction, or death by 60 days. There was a reduction in new infarcts and deaths by day 60 in aspirin-treated participants with microbiologically confirmed TBM compared to placebo. |
| Lee | Antiplatelet agents including aspirin | Retrospective cohort study of incident TB cases in the Taiwan National Tuberculosis Registry between 2008 and 2014 | 9,497 antiplatelet users (including 7,764 aspirin users) compared to 8,864 non-users | After 1:1 propensity score matching, antiplatelet use was associated with longer survival (adjusted hazard ratio (HR): 0.91, 95% confidence interval (CI): 0.88-0.95, p < 0.0001) but no increase in major bleeding risk (p=0.604). |
| Wang | Aspirin | Patients with pulmonary TB and type 2 diabetes mellitus | 348 patients randomized to aspirin (100mg/day) or placebo. 168 patients completed the trial and were included in analysis | Erythrocyte sedimentation rate and C-reactive protein levels were lower (p=0.000), the sputum-negative conversion rate was higher (86.7% versus 53.8%, p=0.031), and the number and size of cavities was smaller in the aspirin-treated than the placebo-treated group. |