Abstract

Mycobacterium tuberculosis (M.tb) and HIV are individually responsible for the most deaths worldwide among all infectious agents, and coinfection with M.tb and HIV is a significant public health challenge in the developing world. Although the lung is the primary target organ for tuberculosis (TB), M.tb can also cause extrapulmonary tuberculosis (EPTB) such as in the bones and joints. Treatment of EPTB is much more challenging than treatment of pulmonary TB. The hallmark of the host immune response against TB is the formation of organized structures called granulomas that are infiltrated with immune cells and are rich in cytokines and chemokines. Inside granulomas, the host confines the M.tb bacteria to a particular region of the organ and avoids dispersion. In this study, we analyzed immune cells in bone granulomas of patients with EPTB that are also coinfected with HIV. We found that HIV-infected TB patients have dispersed bone granulomas, with reduced T cell numbers and a concomitant increase in plasma cells. Additionally, HIV-infected patients exhibited dramatically increased serum levels of IgM and IgG1 antibodies, which is indicative of T-cell-independent B-cell activation and mucosal T-cell activation, respectively. Interestingly, we also observed that CD29+ stem cells are increased in HIV–TB coinfection, suggesting a link with HIV infection. Therefore, our work provides new insights into the architecture of spinal TB granulomas and the role of B-cells and humoral immunity against a highly infectious intracellular pathogen. We propose that our findings will inform biomarker identification for EPTB and possibly the development of related therapeutics and/or vaccines to protect HIV-infected patients against disseminated TB.

Highlights

  • Despite recent advances in diagnosis and treatment, Mycobacterium tuberculosis (M.tb) poses a significant global public health threat [1]

  • We previously described the cellular composition of spinal TB granulomas in HIV-infected patients, which resembled those of pulmonary TB granulomas in HIV-uninfected patients despite some subtle differences [12]

  • It has been demonstrated that various immunocytes infiltrate within spinal granulomas of HIV-1-uninfected and -infected TB patients [12], but the role of these cells in disease pathogenesis remains largely unknown

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Summary

Introduction

Despite recent advances in diagnosis and treatment, Mycobacterium tuberculosis (M.tb) poses a significant global public health threat [1]. The most common cause of immune perturbation in M.tbinfected individuals is HIV coinfection [2] Both TB and HIV have profound effects on the immune system, as they are capable of disarming the host’s immune defenses through mechanisms that are not fully understood. The large-scale application of cART has improved the quality of life of HIV-1-infected individuals and has reduced the incidence of active TB. Despite these public health gains, individuals on cART may still develop active TB at different stages of HIV infection [8], highlighting the need to better understand the underlying mechanisms of disease pathogenesis in coinfected individuals to facilitate better clinical management and disease prevention

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