Prezzemolo Teresa, Guggino Giuliana, La Manna Marco Pio, Di Liberto Diana, Dieli Francesco, Caccamo Nadia
Dipartimento di Biopatologia e Biotecnologie Mediche e Forensi and Central Laboratory of Advanced Diagnosis and Biomedical Research, University of Palermo , Palermo , Italy.
Front Immunol. 2014 Apr 22;5:180. doi: 10.3389/fimmu.2014.00180. eCollection 2014.
With 1.4 million deaths and 8.7 million new cases in 2011, tuberculosis (TB) remains a global health care problem and together with HIV and Malaria represents one of the three infectious diseases world-wide. Control of the global TB epidemic has been impaired by the lack of an effective vaccine, by the emergence of drug-resistant forms of Mycobacterium tuberculosis (Mtb) and by the lack of sensitive and rapid diagnostics. It is estimated, by epidemiological reports, that one third of the world's population is latently infected with Mtb, but the majority of infected individuals develop long-lived protective immunity, which controls and contains Mtb in a T cell-dependent manner. Development of TB disease results from interactions among the environment, the host, and the pathogen, and known risk factors include HIV co-infection, immunodeficiency, diabetes mellitus, overcrowding, malnutrition, and general poverty; therefore, an effective T cell response determines whether the infection resolves or develops into clinically evident disease. Consequently, there is great interest in determining which T cells subsets mediate anti-mycobacterial immunity, delineating their effector functions. On the other hand, many aspects remain unsolved in understanding why some individuals are protected from Mtb infection while others go on to develop disease. Several studies have demonstrated that CD4(+) T cells are involved in protection against Mtb, as supported by the evidence that CD4(+) T cell depletion is responsible for Mtb reactivation in HIV-infected individuals. There are many subsets of CD4(+) T cells, such as T-helper 1 (Th1), Th2, Th17, and regulatory T cells (Tregs), and all these subsets co-operate or interfere with each other to control infection; the dominant subset may differ between active and latent Mtb infection cases. Mtb-specific-CD4(+) Th1 cell response is considered to have a protective role for the ability to produce cytokines such as IFN-γ or TNF-α that contribute to the recruitment and activation of innate immune cells, like monocytes and granulocytes. Thus, while other antigen (Ag)-specific T cells such as CD8(+) T cells, natural killer (NK) cells, γδ T cells, and CD1-restricted T cells can also produce IFN-γ during Mtb infection, they cannot compensate for the lack of CD4(+) T cells. The detection of Ag-specific cytokine production by intracellular cytokine staining (ICS) and the use of flow cytometry techniques are a common routine that supports the studies aimed at focusing the role of the immune system in infectious diseases. Flow cytometry permits to evaluate simultaneously the presence of different cytokines that can delineate different subsets of cells as having "multifunctional/polyfunctional" profile. It has been proposed that polyfunctional T cells, are associated with protective immunity toward Mtb, in particular it has been highlighted that the number of Mtb-specific T cells producing a combination of IFN-γ, IL-2, and/or TNF-α may be correlated with the mycobacterial load, while other studies have associated the presence of this particular functional profile as marker of TB disease activity. Although the role of CD8 T cells in TB is less clear than CD4 T cells, they are generally considered to contribute to optimal immunity and protection. CD8 T cells possess a number of anti-microbial effector mechanisms that are less prominent or absent in CD4 Th1 and Th17 T cells. The interest in studying CD8 T cells that are either MHC-class Ia or MHC-class Ib-restricted, has gained more attention. These studies include the role of HLA-E-restricted cells, lung mucosal-associated invariant T-cells (MAIT), and CD1-restricted cells. Nevertheless, the knowledge about the role of CD8(+) T cells in Mtb infection is relatively new and recent studies have delineated that CD8 T cells, which display a functional profile termed "multifunctional," can be a better marker of protection in TB than CD4(+) T cells. Their effector mechanisms could contribute to control Mtb infection, as upon activation, CD8 T cells release cytokines or cytotoxic molecules, which cause apoptosis of target cells. Taken together, the balance of the immune response in the control of infection and possibly bacterial eradication is important in understanding whether the host immune response will be appropriate in contrasting the infection or not, and, consequently, the inability of the immune response, will determine the dissemination and the transmission of bacilli to new subjects. In conclusion, the recent highlights on the role of different functional signatures of T cell subsets in the immune response toward Mtb infection will be discerned in this review, in order to summarize what is known about the immune response in human TB. In particular, we will discuss the role of CD4 and CD8 T cells in contrasting the advance of the intracellular pathogen in already infected people or the progression to active disease in subjects with latent infection. All the information will be aimed at increasing the knowledge of this complex disease in order to improve diagnosis, prognosis, drug treatment, and vaccination.
2011年,结核病导致140万人死亡,新增870万病例,仍然是一个全球卫生保健问题,与艾滋病和疟疾一起,是全球三大传染病之一。有效的疫苗缺失、结核分枝杆菌(Mtb)耐药形式的出现以及缺乏灵敏快速的诊断方法,都阻碍了全球结核病流行的控制。据流行病学报告估计,全球三分之一的人口潜伏感染Mtb,但大多数感染者会产生长期的保护性免疫,以T细胞依赖的方式控制和遏制Mtb。结核病的发生是环境、宿主和病原体相互作用的结果,已知的风险因素包括HIV合并感染、免疫缺陷、糖尿病、过度拥挤、营养不良和普遍贫困;因此,有效的T细胞反应决定了感染是得到解决还是发展为临床显性疾病。因此,人们非常关注确定哪些T细胞亚群介导抗分枝杆菌免疫,并描述它们的效应功能。另一方面,在理解为什么有些人能免受Mtb感染而另一些人却会发病方面,许多问题仍未解决。多项研究表明,CD4(+) T细胞参与抗Mtb保护,有证据支持CD4(+) T细胞耗竭是HIV感染者中Mtb重新激活的原因。CD4(+) T细胞有许多亚群,如辅助性T细胞1(Th1)、Th2、Th17和调节性T细胞(Treg),所有这些亚群相互协作或相互干扰以控制感染;在活动性和潜伏性Mtb感染病例中,占主导地位的亚群可能有所不同。Mtb特异性-CD4(+) Th1细胞反应被认为具有保护作用,因为它能够产生细胞因子,如IFN-γ或TNF-α,这些细胞因子有助于募集和激活先天免疫细胞,如单核细胞和粒细胞。因此,虽然其他抗原(Ag)特异性T细胞,如CD8(+) T细胞、自然杀伤(NK)细胞、γδ T细胞和CD1限制性T细胞在Mtb感染期间也能产生IFN-γ,但它们无法弥补CD4(+) T细胞的缺失。通过细胞内细胞因子染色(ICS)检测Ag特异性细胞因子的产生以及使用流式细胞术技术是一种常见的常规方法,有助于支持旨在聚焦免疫系统在传染病中作用的研究。流式细胞术能够同时评估不同细胞因子是否存在,这些细胞因子可以将不同的细胞亚群描绘为具有“多功能/多效性”特征。有人提出,多功能T细胞与针对Mtb的保护性免疫相关,特别是有人强调,产生IFN-γ、IL-2和/或TNF-α组合的Mtb特异性T细胞数量可能与分枝杆菌载量相关,而其他研究则将这种特定功能特征的存在与结核病活动的标志物联系起来。虽然CD8 T细胞在结核病中的作用不如CD4 T细胞明确,但它们通常被认为有助于实现最佳免疫和保护。CD8 T细胞具有许多抗菌效应机制,这些机制在CD4 Th1和Th17 T细胞中不太突出或不存在。对研究MHC-Ia类或MHC-Ib类限制性CD8 T细胞的兴趣越来越浓厚。这些研究包括HLA-E限制性细胞、肺黏膜相关恒定T细胞(MAIT)和CD1限制性细胞的作用。然而,关于CD8(+) T细胞在Mtb感染中作用的知识相对较新,最近的研究表明,具有“多功能”功能特征的CD8 T细胞在结核病中可能比CD4(+) T细胞是更好的保护标志物。它们的效应机制可能有助于控制Mtb感染,因为激活后,CD8 T细胞会释放细胞因子或细胞毒性分子,导致靶细胞凋亡。综上所述,免疫反应在控制感染以及可能的细菌清除中的平衡,对于理解宿主免疫反应在对抗感染时是否合适非常重要,因此,免疫反应的无能将决定杆菌向新宿主的传播和传染。总之,本综述将探讨T细胞亚群不同功能特征在针对Mtb感染的免疫反应中的作用,以总结关于人类结核病免疫反应的已知情况。特别是,我们将讨论CD4和CD8 T细胞在对抗已感染人群中细胞内病原体进展或潜伏感染人群发展为活动性疾病方面的作用。所有这些信息旨在增加对这种复杂疾病的了解,以改善诊断、预后、药物治疗和疫苗接种。