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result(s) for
"Filander, Elizabeth"
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Functional, Antigen-Specific Stem Cell Memory (TSCM) CD4+ T Cells Are Induced by Human Mycobacterium tuberculosis Infection
by
Bilek, Nicole
,
Mpande, Cheleka A. M.
,
Dintwe, One B.
in
Adolescent
,
Antigens
,
Antigens, Bacterial - immunology
2018
Maintenance of long-lasting immunity is thought to depend on stem cell memory T cells (T
), which have superior self-renewing capacity, longevity and proliferative potential compared with central memory (T
) or effector (T
) T cells. Our knowledge of T
derives primarily from studies of virus-specific CD8
T
. We aimed to determine if infection with
(
), the etiological agent of tuberculosis, generates antigen-specific CD4
T
and to characterize their functional ontology.
We studied T cell responses to natural
infection in a longitudinal adolescent cohort of recent QuantiFERON-TB Gold (QFT) converters and three cross-sectional QFT
adult cohorts; and to bacillus Calmette-Guerin (BCG) vaccination in infants.
and/or BCG-specific CD4 T cells were detected by flow cytometry using major histocompatibility complex class II tetramers bearing Ag85, CFP-10, or ESAT-6 peptides, or by intracellular cytokine staining. Transcriptomic analyses of
-specific tetramer
CD4
T
(CD45RA
CCR7
CD27
) were performed by microfluidic qRT-PCR, and functional and phenotypic characteristics were confirmed by measuring expression of chemokine receptors, cytotoxic molecules and cytokines using flow cytometry.
-specific T
were not detected in QFT-negative persons. After QFT conversion frequencies of T
increased to measurable levels and remained detectable thereafter, suggesting that primary
infection induces T
cells. Gene expression (GE) profiling of tetramer
T
showed that these cells were distinct from bulk CD4
naïve T cells (T
) and shared features of bulk T
and
-specific tetramer
T
and T
cells. These T
were predominantly CD95
and CXCR3
, markers typical of CD8
T
. Tetramer
T
expressed significantly higher protein levels of CCR5, CCR6, CXCR3, granzyme A, granzyme K, and granulysin than bulk T
and T
cells.
-specific T
were also functional, producing IL-2, IFN-γ, and TNF-α upon antigen stimulation, and their frequencies correlated positively with long-term BCG-specific CD4
T cell proliferative potential after infant vaccination.
Human infection with
induced distinct, antigen-specific CD4
T
cells endowed with effector functions, including expression of cytotoxic molecules and Th1 cytokines, and displayed chemokine receptor profiles consistent with memory Th1/17 cells. Induction of CD4
T
should be considered for vaccination approaches that aim to generate long-lived memory T cells against
.
Journal Article
Tuberculosis alters immune-metabolic pathways resulting in perturbed IL-1 responses
2022
Tuberculosis (TB) remains a major public health problem and we lack a comprehensive understanding of how Mycobacterium tuberculosis ( M. tb ) infection impacts host immune responses. We compared the induced immune response to TB antigen, BCG and IL-1β stimulation between latently M. tb infected individuals (LTBI) and active TB patients. This revealed distinct responses between TB/LTBI at transcriptomic, proteomic and metabolomic levels. At baseline, we identified a novel immune-metabolic association between pregnane steroids, the PPARγ pathway and elevated plasma IL-1ra in TB. We observed dysregulated IL-1 responses after BCG stimulation in TB patients, with elevated IL-1ra responses being explained by upstream TNF differences. Additionally, distinct secretion of IL-1α/IL-1β in LTBI/TB after BCG stimulation was associated with downstream differences in granzyme mediated cleavage. Finally, IL-1β driven signalling was dramatically perturbed in TB disease but was completely restored after successful treatment. This study improves our knowledge of how immune responses are altered during TB disease, and may support the design of improved preventive and therapeutic tools, including host-directed strategies.
Journal Article
Biomarker-guided tuberculosis preventive therapy (CORTIS): a randomised controlled trial
2021
Targeted preventive therapy for individuals at highest risk of incident tuberculosis might impact the epidemic by interrupting transmission. We tested performance of a transcriptomic signature of tuberculosis (RISK11) and efficacy of signature-guided preventive therapy in parallel, using a hybrid three-group study design.
Adult volunteers aged 18–59 years were recruited at five geographically distinct communities in South Africa. Whole blood was sampled for RISK11 by quantitative RT-PCR assay from eligible volunteers without HIV, recent previous tuberculosis (ie, <3 years before screening), or comorbidities at screening. RISK11-positive participants were block randomised (1:2; block size 15) to once-weekly, directly-observed, open-label isoniazid and rifapentine for 12 weeks (ie, RISK11 positive and 3HP positive), or no treatment (ie, RISK11 positive and 3HP negative). A subset of eligible RISK11-negative volunteers were randomly assigned to no treatment (ie, RISK11 negative and 3HP negative). Diagnostic discrimination of prevalent tuberculosis was tested in all participants at baseline. Thereafter, prognostic discrimination of incident tuberculosis was tested in the untreated RISK11-positive versus RISK11-negative groups, and treatment efficacy in the 3HP-treated versus untreated RISK11-positive groups, during active surveillance through 15 months. The primary endpoint was microbiologically confirmed pulmonary tuberculosis. The primary outcome measures were risk ratio [RR] for tuberculosis of RISK11-positive to RISK11-negative participants, and treatment efficacy. This trial is registered with ClinicalTrials.gov, NCT02735590.
20 207 volunteers were screened, and 2923 participants were enrolled, including RISK11-positive participants randomly assigned to 3HP (n=375) or no 3HP (n=764), and 1784 RISK11-negative participants. Cumulative probability of prevalent or incident tuberculosis disease was 0·066 (95% CI 0·049 to 0·084) in RISK11-positive (3HP negative) participants and 0·018 (0·011 to 0·025) in RISK11-negative participants (RR 3·69, 95% CI 2·25–6·05) over 15 months. Tuberculosis prevalence was 47 (4·1%) of 1139 versus 14 (0·78%) of 1984 in RISK11-positive compared with RISK11-negative participants, respectively (diagnostic RR 5·13, 95% CI 2·93 to 9·43). Tuberculosis incidence over 15 months was 2·09 (95% CI 0·97 to 3·19) vs 0·80 (0·30 to 1·30) per 100 person years in RISK11-positive (3HP-negative) participants compared with RISK11-negative participants (cumulative incidence ratio 2·6, 95% CI 1·2 to 5·9). Serious adverse events related to 3HP included one hospitalisation for seizures (unintentional isoniazid overdose) and one death of unknown cause (possibly temporally related). Tuberculosis incidence over 15 months was 1·94 (95% CI 0·35 to 3·50) versus 2·09 (95% CI 0·97 to 3·19) per 100 person-years in 3HP-treated RISK11-positive participants compared with untreated RISK11-positive participants (efficacy 7·0%, 95% CI −145 to 65).
The RISK11 signature discriminated between individuals with prevalent tuberculosis, or progression to incident tuberculosis, and individuals who remained healthy, but provision of 3HP to signature-positive individuals after exclusion of baseline disease did not reduce progression to tuberculosis over 15 months.
Bill and Melinda Gates Foundation, South African Medical Research Council.
Journal Article
RISK6, a 6-gene transcriptomic signature of TB disease risk, diagnosis and treatment response
2020
Improved tuberculosis diagnostics and tools for monitoring treatment response are urgently needed. We developed a robust and simple, PCR-based host-blood transcriptomic signature, RISK6, for multiple applications: identifying individuals at risk of incident disease, as a screening test for subclinical or clinical tuberculosis, and for monitoring tuberculosis treatment. RISK6 utility was validated by blind prediction using quantitative real-time (qRT) PCR in seven independent cohorts. Prognostic performance significantly exceeded that of previous signatures discovered in the same cohort. Performance for diagnosing subclinical and clinical disease in HIV-uninfected and HIV-infected persons, assessed by area under the receiver-operating characteristic curve, exceeded 85%. As a screening test for tuberculosis, the sensitivity at 90% specificity met or approached the benchmarks set out in World Health Organization target product profiles for non-sputum-based tests. RISK6 scores correlated with lung immunopathology activity, measured by positron emission tomography, and tracked treatment response, demonstrating utility as treatment response biomarker, while predicting treatment failure prior to treatment initiation. Performance of the test in capillary blood samples collected by finger-prick was noninferior to venous blood collected in PAXgene tubes. These results support incorporation of RISK6 into rapid, capillary blood-based point-of-care PCR devices for prospective assessment in field studies.
Journal Article
Optimization and Interpretation of Serial QuantiFERON Testing to Measure Acquisition of Mycobacterium tuberculosis Infection
by
Erasmus, Mzwandile
,
Botes, Janelle
,
Hendricks, Angelique
in
Adolescent
,
Adult
,
Clinical trials
2017
Conversion from a negative to positive QuantiFERON-TB test is indicative of Mycobacterium tuberculosis (Mtb) infection, which predisposes individuals to tuberculosis disease. Interpretation of serial tests is confounded by immunological and technical variability.
To improve the consistency of serial QuantiFERON-TB testing algorithms and provide a data-driven definition of conversion.
Sources of QuantiFERON-TB variability were assessed, and optimal procedures were identified. Distributions of IFN-γ response levels were analyzed in healthy adolescents, Mtb-unexposed control subjects, and patients with pulmonary tuberculosis.
Individuals with no known Mtb exposure had IFN-γ values less than 0.2 IU/ml. Among individuals with IFN-γ values less than 0.2 IU/ml, 0.2-0.34 IU/ml, 0.35-0.7 IU/ml, and greater than 0.7 IU/ml, tuberculin skin test positivity results were 15%, 53%, 66%, and 91% (P < 0.005), respectively. Together, these findings suggest that values less than 0.2 IU/ml were true negatives. In short-term serial testing, \"uncertain\" conversions, with at least one value within the uncertainty zone (0.2-0.7 IU/ml), were partly explained by technical assay variability. Individuals who had a change in QuantiFERON-TB IFN-γ values from less than 0.2 to greater than 0.7 IU/ml had 10-fold higher tuberculosis incidence rates than those who maintained values less than 0.2 IU/ml over 2 years (P = 0.0003). By contrast, \"uncertain\" converters were not at higher risk than nonconverters (P = 0.229). Eighty-seven percent of patients with active tuberculosis had IFN-γ values greater than 0.7 IU/ml, suggesting that these values are consistent with established Mtb infection.
Implementation of optimized procedures and a more rigorous QuantiFERON-TB conversion definition (an increase from IFN-γ <0.2 to >0.7 IU/ml) would allow more definitive detection of recent Mtb infection and potentially improve identification of those more likely to develop disease.
Journal Article
Tuberculosis alters immune-metabolic pathways resulting in perturbed IL-1 responses
2020
Mycobacterium tuberculosis (M.tb) infection impacts immune responses. To address this challenge, we applied standardised immunomonitoring tools to compare TB antigen, BCG and IL-1β induced immune responses between individuals with latent M.tb infection (LTBI) and active TB disease, at diagnosis and after cure. This revealed distinct responses between TB and LTBI groups at transcriptomic, proteomic and metabolomic levels. At baseline, we identified pregnane steroids and the PPARγ pathway as new immune-metabolic drivers of elevated plasma IL-1ra in TB. We also observed dysregulated induced IL-1 responses after BCG stimulation in TB patients. Elevated IL-1 antagonist responses were explained by upstream differences in TNF responses, while for IL-1 agonists it was due to downstream differences in granzyme mediated cleavage. Finally, the immune response to IL-1β driven signalling was also dramatically perturbed in TB disease but was completely restored after successful antibiotic treatment. This systems immunology approach improves our knowledge of how immune responses are altered during TB disease, and may support design of improved diagnostic, prophylactic and therapeutic tools. Competing Interest Statement MLA is a current employee of Insitro, who had no influence on the study design or reporting. DD has received grant support in the past from Myriad RBM and Roche Genentech but not in the context of this study. The other authors declare no competing interests.
Immune profiling in M. tuberculosis infection enables stratification of patients with active disease
by
Bilek, Nicole
,
Rouilly, Vincent
,
Nemes, Elisa
in
Antigens
,
Bacillus Calmette-Guerin vaccine
,
Blood
2019
Tuberculosis (TB) is caused by Mycobacterium tuberculosis (Mtb) infection and is a major public health problem with an estimated 1.7 billion persons infected worldwide. Clinical challenges in TB include the lack of a blood-based test for active disease, and the absence of prognostic biomarkers for early treatment response. Current blood based tests, such as QuantiFERON-TB Gold (QFT), are based on an IFNγ readout following Mtb antigen stimulation. However, they do not distinguish active TB disease from asymptomatic Mtb infection. We hypothesized that the use of TruCulture, an improved immunomonitoring method for whole blood collection and immune stimulation, could improve the discrimination of active disease from latent Mtb infection. To test our hypothesis, we stimulated whole blood from active TB patients (before and after successful treatment), comparing them to asymptomatic latently infected individuals. Mtb-specific antigens (ESAT-6, CFP-10, TB7.7) and live bacillus Calmette-Guerin (BCG) were used for TruCulture stimulation conditions, with direct comparison to QFT. Protein analyses were performed on the culture supernatants using ELISA and Luminex multi-analyte profiling. TruCulture showed an ability to discriminate active TB cases from latent controls (p < 0.0001, AUC = 0.81, 95% CI: 0.69-0.93) as compared to QFT (p = 0.47 AUC = 0.56, 95% CI: 0.40-0.72), based on an IFNγ readout after Mtb antigen stimulation. The stratification of the two groups could be further improved by using the Mtb Ag/BCG IFNγ ratio response (p < 0.0001, AUC = 0.918, 95% CI: 0.84-0.98). We also identified additional cytokines that distinguished latent infection from TB disease; and show that the primary differences between the TruCulture and QFT systems were a result of higher levels of non-specific innate immune activation in QFT tubes, due to the lack of a buffering solution in the latter. We conclude that TruCulture offers a next-generation solution for whole blood stimulation and immunomonitoring with the possibility to discriminate active and latently infected persons.