GM-CSF targeted immunomodulation affects host response to M. tuberculosis infection.
Sulayman BenmerzougFábio Antônio Vitarelli MarinhoStéphanie RoseClaire MackowiakDavid GossetDelphine SeddaEmeline PoissonCatherine UyttenhoveJacques Van SnickMuazzam JacobsIrene GarciaBernhard RyffelValerie F J QuesniauxPublished in: Scientific reports (2018)
Host directed immunomodulation represents potential new adjuvant therapies in infectious diseases such as tuberculosis. Major cytokines like TNFα exert a multifold role in host control of mycobacterial infections. GM-CSF and its receptor are over-expressed during acute M. tuberculosis infection and we asked how GM-CSF neutralization might affect host response, both in immunocompetent and in immunocompromised TNFα-deficient mice. GM-CSF neutralizing antibodies, at a dose effectively preventing acute lung inflammation, did not affect M. tuberculosis bacterial burden, but increased the number of granuloma in wild-type mice. We next assessed whether GM-CSF neutralization might affect the control of M. tuberculosis by isoniazid/rifampicin chemotherapy. GM-CSF neutralization compromised the bacterial control under sub-optimal isoniazid/rifampicin treatment in TNFα-deficient mice, leading to exacerbated lung inflammation with necrotic granulomatous structures and high numbers of intracellular M. tuberculosis bacilli. In vitro, GM-CSF neutralization promoted M2 anti-inflammatory phenotype in M. bovis BCG infected macrophages, with reduced mycobactericidal NO production and higher intracellular M. bovis BCG burden. Thus, GM-CSF pathway overexpression during acute M. tuberculosis infection contributes to an efficient M1 response, and interfering with GM-CSF pathway in the course of infection may impair the host inflammatory response against M. tuberculosis.
Keyphrases
- mycobacterium tuberculosis
- pulmonary tuberculosis
- hiv aids
- inflammatory response
- rheumatoid arthritis
- liver failure
- oxidative stress
- respiratory failure
- cerebrospinal fluid
- infectious diseases
- cell proliferation
- emergency department
- radiation therapy
- type diabetes
- drug induced
- risk factors
- intensive care unit
- hepatitis c virus
- hepatitis b virus
- skeletal muscle
- interstitial lung disease
- insulin resistance
- drug delivery
- lipopolysaccharide induced
- human immunodeficiency virus
- cancer therapy
- antiretroviral therapy
- climate change
- rectal cancer
- mass spectrometry
- high fat diet induced
- hiv infected