The Ragon Institute of MGH, MIT, and Harvard , Cambridge, Massachusetts, USA.
Department of Biological Engineering, Massachusetts Institute of Technology , Cambridge, Massachusetts, USA.
mSystems. 2023 Aug 31;8(4):e0005223. doi: 10.1128/msystems.00052-23. Epub 2023 Jul 13.
Tuberculosis (TB), caused by the pathogenic bacterium (Mtb), is a global health threat. Targeting host pathways that modulate protective or harmful components of inflammation has been proposed as a therapeutic strategy that could aid sterilization or mitigate TB-associated permanent tissue damage. In purified form, many Mtb components can activate innate immune pathways. However, knowledge of the pathways that contribute most to the observed response to live Mtb is incomplete, limiting the possibility of precise intervention. We took a systematic, unbiased approach to define the pathways that drive the earliest immune response to Mtb. Using a macrophage model of infection, we compared the bulk transcriptional response to infection with the response to a panel of Mtb-derived putative innate immune ligands. We identified two axes of response: an NF-kB-dependent response similarly elicited by all Mtb pathogen-associated molecular patterns (PAMPs) and a type I interferon axis unique to cells infected with live Mtb. Consistent with growing literature data pointing to TLR2 as a dominant Mtb-associated PAMP, the TLR2 ligand PIM6 most closely approximated the NF-kB-dependent response to the intact bacterium. Quantitatively, the macrophage response to Mtb was slower and weaker than the response to purified PIM6. On a subpopulation level, the TLR2-dependent response was heterogeneously induced, with only a subset of infected cells expressing key inflammatory genes known to contribute to the control of infection. Despite potential redundancies in Mtb ligand/innate immune receptor interactions during infection, loss of the TLR2/PIM6 interaction impacted the cellular composition of both the innate and adaptive compartments. IMPORTANCE Tuberculosis (TB) is a leading cause of death globally. Drug resistance is outpacing new antibiotic discovery, and even after successful treatment, individuals are often left with permanent lung damage from the negative consequences of inflammation. Targeting host inflammatory pathways has been proposed as an approach that could either improve sterilization or improve post-treatment lung health. However, our understanding of the inflammatory pathways triggered by (Mtb) in infected cells and lungs is incomplete, in part because of the complex array of potential molecular interactions between bacterium and host. Here, we take an unbiased approach to identify the pathways most central to the host response to Mtb. We examine how individual pathways are triggered differently by purified Mtb products or infection with the live bacterium and consider how these pathways inform the emergence of subpopulation responses in cell culture and in infected mice. Understanding how individual interactions and immune pathways contribute to inflammation in TB opens the door to the possibility of developing precise therapeutic interventions.
结核病(TB)是由致病细菌(Mtb)引起的,是全球健康威胁之一。靶向调节炎症中保护性或有害成分的宿主途径已被提议作为一种治疗策略,该策略可能有助于灭菌或减轻与 TB 相关的永久性组织损伤。以纯形式,许多 Mtb 成分可以激活先天免疫途径。然而,对于导致对活 Mtb 观察到的反应的途径的了解并不完整,限制了精确干预的可能性。我们采用系统的、无偏见的方法来定义驱动对 Mtb 的最早免疫反应的途径。我们使用巨噬细胞感染模型,将感染的批量转录反应与对 Mtb 衍生的潜在先天免疫配体的反应进行了比较。我们确定了两个反应轴:一种 NF-kB 依赖性反应,所有 Mtb 病原体相关分子模式(PAMPs)都能同样引发;一种 I 型干扰素轴,仅感染活 Mtb 的细胞才会发生。与越来越多的文献数据表明 TLR2 是主要的 Mtb 相关 PAMP 一致,TLR2 配体 PIM6 最接近完整细菌的 NF-kB 依赖性反应。定量地,巨噬细胞对 Mtb 的反应比纯化的 PIM6 慢且弱。在亚群水平上,TLR2 依赖性反应呈异质性诱导,只有一部分感染细胞表达已知有助于控制感染的关键炎症基因。尽管在感染过程中 Mtb 配体/先天免疫受体相互作用可能存在冗余,但 TLR2/PIM6 相互作用的丧失会影响先天和适应性隔室的细胞组成。重要性 结核病(TB)是全球死亡的主要原因。耐药性超过了新抗生素的发现速度,即使治疗成功,个体也经常因炎症的负面影响而留下永久性的肺部损伤。靶向宿主炎症途径已被提议作为一种既能提高灭菌率又能改善治疗后肺部健康的方法。然而,我们对感染细胞和肺部中 Mtb 触发的炎症途径的理解并不完整,部分原因是细菌和宿主之间存在复杂的潜在分子相互作用。在这里,我们采用一种无偏见的方法来确定宿主对 Mtb 反应的核心途径。我们研究了单个途径如何通过纯化的 Mtb 产物或感染活细菌而不同地被触发,并考虑了这些途径如何为细胞培养和感染小鼠中的亚群反应的出现提供信息。了解单个相互作用和免疫途径如何导致 TB 中的炎症,为开发精确的治疗干预措施开辟了可能性。