Department of Population and Quantitative Health Sciences, Case Western Reserve University, Cleveland, OH, United States of America.
Department of Population and Quantitative Health Sciences, Case Western Reserve University, Cleveland, OH, United States of America; Department of Genetics and Genome Sciences, Case Western Reserve University, Cleveland, OH, United States of America.
Infect Genet Evol. 2020 Jul;81:104204. doi: 10.1016/j.meegid.2020.104204. Epub 2020 Jan 22.
Tuberculosis is the most lethal infectious disease globally, but the vast majority of people who are exposed to the primary causative pathogen, Mycobacterium tuberculosis (MTB), do not develop active disease. Most people do, however, show signs of infection that remain throughout their lifetimes. In this review, we develop a framework that describes several possible transitions from pathogen exposure to TB disease and reflect on the genetics studies to address many of these. The evidence strongly supports a human genetic component for both infection and active disease, but many of the existing studies, including some of our own, do not clearly delineate what transition(s) is being explicitly examined. This can make interpretation difficult in terms of why only some people develop active disease. Nonetheless, both linkage peaks and associations with either active disease or latent infection have been identified. For transition to active disease, pathways defined as active TB altered T and B cell signaling in rheumatoid arthritis and T helper cell differentiation are significantly associated. Pathways that affect transition from exposure to infection are less clear-cut, as studies of this phenotype are less common, and a primary response, if it exists, is not yet well defined. Lastly, we discuss the role that interaction between the MTB lineage and human genetics can play in TB disease, especially severity. Severity of TB is at present the only way to study putative co-evolution between MTB and humans as it is impossible in the absence of disease to know the MTB lineage(s) to which an individual has been exposed. In addition, even though severity has been defined in multiple heterogeneous ways, it appears that MTB-human co-evolution may shape pathogenicity. Further analysis of co-evolution, requiring careful analysis of paired samples, may be the best way to completely assess the genetic basis of TB.
结核病是全球最致命的传染病,但绝大多数接触主要病原体结核分枝杆菌 (MTB) 的人并不会患上活动性疾病。然而,大多数人确实表现出感染迹象,这些迹象会伴随他们一生。在这篇综述中,我们构建了一个框架,描述了从病原体暴露到结核病发病的几种可能的转变,并反思了为解决其中许多问题而进行的遗传学研究。证据强烈支持人类遗传因素在感染和活动性疾病中都有作用,但许多现有研究,包括我们自己的一些研究,并没有明确界定正在研究的是哪种(或哪些)转变。这使得在解释为什么只有一些人会发展为活动性疾病时变得困难。尽管如此,无论是与活动性疾病还是潜伏性感染有关的连锁峰和关联都已被确定。对于向活动性疾病的转变,被定义为活动性结核病的途径改变了类风湿关节炎和辅助性 T 细胞分化中的 T 和 B 细胞信号转导,这与疾病显著相关。而影响从暴露到感染转变的途径则不那么明确,因为对这种表型的研究较少,并且如果存在主要反应,目前也尚未明确界定。最后,我们讨论了 MTB 谱系与人类遗传学之间的相互作用在结核病发病中的作用,尤其是严重程度。结核病的严重程度是目前唯一研究 MTB 和人类之间所谓共同进化的方法,因为在没有疾病的情况下,无法知道个体暴露于哪种 MTB 谱系。此外,尽管严重程度已经以多种不同的方式定义,但 MTB-人类共同进化似乎可能影响致病性。进一步分析共同进化,需要对配对样本进行仔细分析,可能是全面评估结核病遗传基础的最佳方法。