Abstract

Tuberculosis (TB), caused by Mycobacterium tuberculosis infection, remains a major cause of mortality and morbidity worldwide. One-third of the world population is infected with M. tuberculosis, and about 15 million people with latent tuberculosis infection (LTBI) reside in the United States. An estimated 10% of individuals with LTBI are at risk of progressing to active disease. Loss of body mass, or wasting, accompanied by a significant reduction of body fat is often associated with active TB disease and is considered to be immunosuppressive and a major determinant of severity and outcome of disease. While the lungs are the primary site of M. tuberculosis infection and TB manifestation, recent reports have shown that adipose tissue serves as an important reservoir for M. tuberculosis In this article, we investigated the association between M. tuberculosis infection, adipose tissue, and TB disease progression using a transgenic inducible "fatless" model system, the FAT-ATTAC (fat apoptosis through targeted activation of caspase 8) mouse. By selectively ablating fat tissue during M. tuberculosis infection, we directly tested the role of fat cell loss and adipose tissue physiology in regulating pulmonary pathology, bacterial burden, and immune status. Our results confirm the presence of M. tuberculosis in fat tissue after aerosol infection of mice and show that loss of fat cells is associated with an increase in pulmonary M. tuberculosis burden and pathology. We conclude that acute loss of adipose tissue during LTBI may predispose the host to active TB disease.IMPORTANCE Although the lungs are the port of entry and the predominant site of TB disease manifestation, we and others have demonstrated that M. tuberculosis also persists in adipose tissue of aerosol-infected animals and directly or indirectly alters adipose tissue physiology, which in turn alters whole-body immuno-metabolic homeostasis. Our present report demonstrates a direct effect of loss of adipocytes (fat cells) on promoting the severity of pulmonary pathogenesis during TB, advancing our understanding of the pathogenic interactions between wasting and TB activation/reactivation.

Highlights

  • Tuberculosis (TB), caused by Mycobacterium tuberculosis infection, remains a major cause of mortality and morbidity worldwide

  • About two-thirds of the stromal vascular fraction of adipose tissue is comprised of immune cells, which contribute to whole-body immune signaling via secreted adipokines and cytokines such as adiponectin, leptin, tumor necrosis factor alpha (TNF-␣), gamma interferon (IFN-␥), interleukin-6 (IL-6), and IL-10 [6]

  • We have investigated whether adipose tissue and acute adipocyte loss plays a regulatory role in pulmonary pathology during M. tuberculosis infection, using a transgenic inducible “fatless” model system, the FAT-ATTAC mouse [10, 11]

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Summary

Introduction

Tuberculosis (TB), caused by Mycobacterium tuberculosis infection, remains a major cause of mortality and morbidity worldwide. Our results confirm the presence of M. tuberculosis in fat tissue after aerosol infection of mice and show that loss of fat cells is associated with an increase in pulmonary M. tuberculosis burden and pathology. It is well documented that progressive loss of body mass, or wasting, is associated with active TB disease [2]. We reported an association between key adipokine levels and the dynamics of M. tuberculosis pathogenesis in the lungs and adipose tissue using a rabbit model of pulmonary infection, with two clinical M. tuberculosis isolates that produced divergent outcomes of disease progression [5]. The lungs serve as the port of entry and the predominant site of TB disease manifestation, recent reports have shown that adipose tissue serves as an important niche and reservoir for M. tuberculosis and that M. tuberculosis infection alters adipose tissue biology [7,8,9]. The role of adipose tissue in the progression and pathology of M. tuberculosis infection has remained unclear

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