Affiliation:
1. Grupo de Inmunología Celular e Inmunogenética, Instituto de Investigaciones Médicas, Facultad de Medicina, Universidad de Antioquia, Medellín, Colombia
2. Department of Infectious Diseases, Leiden University Medical Centre, Leiden, Netherlands
Abstract
ABSTRACT
Multifunctional T cells have been shown to be protective in chronic viral infections. In mycobacterial infections, however, evidence for a protective role of multifunctional T cells remains inconclusive. Short-term cultures of peripheral blood mononuclear cells stimulated with the
Mycobacterium tuberculosis
RD1 antigens 6-kDa early secretory antigenic target (ESAT6) and 10-kDa culture filtrate antigen (CFP10), which are induced in the early infection phase, have been mainly used to assess T cell multifunctionality, although long-term culture assays have been proposed to be more sensitive than short-term assays for assessment of memory T cells, which are essential for long-term immunity. Here we used a long-term culture assay system to study the T cell immune responses to the
M. tuberculosis
latency-associated DosR antigens and reactivation-associated Rpf antigens, compared to ESAT6 and CFP10, in patients with pulmonary tuberculosis (PTB) and household contacts of PTB patients with long-term latent tuberculosis infection (ltLTBI), in a community in which
M. tuberculosis
is endemic. Our results showed that the DosR antigens Rv1737c (
narK2
) and Rv2029c (
pfkB
) and the Rv2389c (
rpfD
) antigen of
M. tuberculosis
induced higher frequencies of CD4
+
or CD8
+
mono- or bifunctional (but not multifunctional) T cells producing interferon gamma (IFN-γ) and/or tumor necrosis alpha (TNF-α) in ltLTBI, compared to PTB. Moreover, the frequencies of CD4
+
and/or CD8
+
T cells with a CD45RO
+
CD27
+
phenotype were higher in ltLTBI than in PTB. Thus, the immune responses to selected DosR and Rpf antigens may be associated with long-term latency, correlating with protection from
M. tuberculosis
reactivation in ltLTBI. Further study of the functional and memory phenotypes may contribute to further discrimination between the different states of
M. tuberculosis
infections.
Publisher
American Society for Microbiology
Subject
Microbiology (medical),Clinical Biochemistry,Immunology,Immunology and Allergy
Cited by
30 articles.
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