Rangaraj Siranjeevi, Agarwal Anushka, Banerjee Sharmistha
Laboratory of Molecular Pathogenesis, Department of Biochemistry, School of Life Sciences, University of Hyderabad, Hyderabad, Telangana 500046, India.
ACS Infect Dis. 2025 May 9;11(5):1042-1063. doi: 10.1021/acsinfecdis.4c00870. Epub 2025 Apr 14.
Tuberculosis (TB), caused by (), is the most common secondary infection in the Human Immunodeficiency Virus (HIV) infected population, accounting for more than one-fourth of deaths in people living with HIV (PLWH). Reciprocally, HIV infection increases the susceptibility to primary TB or reactivation of latent TB by several folds. The synergistic interactions between and HIV not only potentiate their deleterious impact but also complicate the clinical management of both the diseases. -HIV coinfected patients have a high risk of failure of accurate diagnosis, treatment inefficiency for both TB and HIV, concurrent nontuberculous mycobacterial infections, other comorbidities such as diabetes mellitus, severe cytotoxicity due to drug overburden, and immune reconstitution inflammatory syndrome (IRIS). The need of the hour is to understand -HIV coinfection biology and their collective impact on the host immunocompetence and to think of out-of-the-box treatment perspectives, including host-directed therapy under the rising view of homeostatic medicines. This review aims to highlight the molecular players, both from the pathogens and host, that facilitate the synergistic interactions and host-associated proteins/enzymes regulating immunometabolism, underlining potential targets for designing and screening chemical inhibitors to reduce the burden of both pathogens concomitantly during -HIV coinfection. To appreciate the necessity of revisiting therapeutic approaches and research priorities, we provide a glimpse of anti-TB and antiretroviral drug-drug interactions, project the gaps in our understanding of coinfection biology, and also enlist some key research initiatives that will help us deal with the synergistic epidemic of -HIV coinfection.
由()引起的结核病(TB)是人类免疫缺陷病毒(HIV)感染人群中最常见的继发感染,占HIV感染者(PLWH)死亡人数的四分之一以上。相反,HIV感染会使原发性结核病或潜伏性结核病再激活的易感性增加几倍。()与HIV之间的协同相互作用不仅会增强它们的有害影响,还会使这两种疾病的临床管理变得复杂。()-HIV合并感染患者存在准确诊断失败、结核病和HIV治疗效率低下、并发非结核分枝杆菌感染、其他合并症(如糖尿病)、药物负担导致的严重细胞毒性以及免疫重建炎症综合征(IRIS)的高风险。当务之急是了解()-HIV合并感染生物学及其对宿主免疫能力的综合影响,并思考创新的治疗观点,包括在稳态药物日益受到关注的情况下进行宿主导向治疗。本综述旨在强调病原体和宿主中促进协同相互作用的分子参与者以及调节免疫代谢的宿主相关蛋白质/酶,强调在()-HIV合并感染期间设计和筛选化学抑制剂以同时减轻两种病原体负担的潜在靶点。为了认识到重新审视治疗方法和研究重点的必要性,我们简要介绍了抗结核药物和抗逆转录病毒药物之间的药物相互作用,指出我们对合并感染生物学理解上的差距,并列出一些关键的研究倡议,这些倡议将帮助我们应对()-HIV合并感染的协同流行。