Clinical isolates of Mycobacterium tuberculosis with different genotypes exhibit distinct host macrophage responses in vitro

Author:

Liang Chen1,Li Xiaomeng1,Li Qiao1,Zhang Xuxia1,Ren Weicong1,Yao Cong1,Pang Yu1,Liu Yi1,Li Chuanyou21,Tang Shenjie3

Affiliation:

1. Department of Bacteriology and Immunology, Beijing Key Laboratory on Drug-Resistant Tuberculosis Research, Beijing Chest Hospital, Capital Medical University & Beijing Tuberculosis and Thoracic Tumor Research Institute, Tongzhou District, Beijing, 101149, PR China

2. Department of Tuberculosis, Beijing Center for Tuberculosis Research and Control, Beijing Center for Disease Prevention and Control, Xicheng District, Beijing 100035, PR China

3. Tuberculosis Clinical Medical Center, Beijing Chest Hospital, Capital Medical University & Beijing Tuberculosis and Thoracic Tumor Research Institute, Tongzhou District, Beijing, 101149, PR China

Abstract

Introduction. Mycobacterium tuberculosis (M.tb), the causative agent of tuberculosis, can survive as an intracellular parasite after entering macrophages via phagocytosis. M.tb strains are genotypically distinct and engage in diverse pathogen–host interactions, with different host immune responses triggered by different M.tb strains. Importantly, differences in intracellular accumulation and triggering of host macrophage responses during early infection stages are key determinants that shape the final outcomes of host innate immune responses to different M.tb strains. Hypothesis/Gap Statement. Clinical M.tb strains with different genotypes elicit different host innate immune responses in vitro. Aim. This work aimed to compare host innate immune responses elicited by genotypically diverse, clinically derived M.tb strains in vitro. Methodology. RAW264.7 cells were infected with three lineage 2 and lineage 4 clinically derived M.tb strains and strain H37Rv. Strains were evaluated for differences in intracellular growth, induction of macrophage apoptosis, and induction of expression of proinflammatory cytokines and associated pattern recognition receptors. Results. Highly variable cytokine profiles were observed subsequent to RAW264.7 cell infection with the different strains. The Beijing genotype strain, a modern Beijing strain belonging to lineage 2, induced milder host proinflammatory responses and less apoptosis and exhibited greater intracellular growth as compared to the other strains. Moreover, mRNA expression levels of iNOS in Beijing and MANU2 genotype strains exceeded corresponding levels obtained for the T1 genotype strain. Meanwhile, mRNA expression levels of toll-like receptor (TLR)-encoding genes TLR2 and TLR7 in macrophages infected with the Beijing genotype strain were higher than corresponding levels observed in MANU2 genotype strain-infected macrophages. Conclusion. The higher intracellular survival rate and lower level of host cell apoptosis associated with macrophage infection with the Beijing genotype strain indicated greater virulence of this strain relative to that of the other strains. Furthermore, in vitro immune responses induced by the Beijing genotype strain were unique in that this strain induced a weaker inflammatory response than was induced by T1 or MANU2 genotype strains. Nevertheless, additional evidence is needed to confirm that Beijing genotype strains possess greater virulence than strains with other genotypes.

Funder

Beijing Key Clinical Speciality Project

the Capital Medical Development Special Foundation

the Research Capability Promotion Project of Beijing TB and Thoracic Tumor Research Institute

Scientific Research Project of Beijing Educational Committee

Publisher

Microbiology Society

Subject

Microbiology (medical),General Medicine,Microbiology

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