Multiplexed imaging of human tuberculosis granulomas uncovers immunoregulatory features conserved across tissue and blood

Author:

McCaffrey Erin F.ORCID,Donato Michele,Keren Leeat,Chen Zhenghao,Fitzpatrick Megan,Jojic Vladimir,Delmastro Alea,Greenwald Noah F.,Baranski Alex,Graf William,Bosse Marc,Ramdial Pratista K.,Forgo Erna,Van Valen David,van de Rijn Matt,Bendall Sean C.ORCID,Banaei Niaz,Steyn Adrie J.C.,Khatri Purvesh,Angelo Michael

Abstract

AbstractTuberculosis (TB) is an infectious disease caused by Mycobacterium tuberculosis that is distinctly characterized by granuloma formation within infected tissues. Granulomas are dynamic and organized immune cell aggregates that limit dissemination, but can also hinder bacterial clearance. Consequently, outcome in TB is influenced by how granuloma structure and composition shift the balance between these two functions. To date, our understanding of what factors drive granuloma function in humans is limited. With this in mind, we used Multiplexed Ion Beam Imaging by Time-of-Flight (MIBI-TOF) to profile 37 proteins in tissues from thirteen patients with active TB disease from the U.S. and South Africa. With this dataset, we constructed a comprehensive tissue atlas where the lineage, functional state, and spatial distribution of 19 unique cell subsets were mapped onto eight phenotypically-distinct granuloma microenvironments. This work revealed an immunosuppressed microenvironment specific to TB granulomas with spatially coordinated co-expression of IDO1 and PD-L1 by myeloid cells and proliferating regulatory T cells. Interestingly, this microenvironment lacked markers consistent with T-cell activation, supporting a myeloid-mediated mechanism of immune suppression. We observed similar trends in gene expression of immunoregulatory proteins in a confirmatory transcriptomic analysis of peripheral blood collected from over 1500 individuals with latent or active TB infection and healthy controls across 29 cohorts spanning 14 countries. Notably, PD-L1 gene expression was found to correlate with TB progression and treatment response, supporting its potential use as a blood-based biomarker. Taken together, this study serves as a framework for leveraging independent cohorts and complementary methodologies to understand how local and systemic immune responses are linked in human health and disease.

Publisher

Cold Spring Harbor Laboratory

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