Abstract

Tuberculosis (TB) remains a major public health threat globally, especially in sub-Saharan Africa. Both human and Mycobacterium tuberculosis (MTBC) genetic variation affect TB outcomes, but few studies have examined if and how the two genomes interact to affect disease. We hypothesize that long-term coexistence between human genomes and MTBC lineages modulates disease to affect its severity. We examined this hypothesis in our TB household contact study in Kampala, Uganda, in which we identified three MTBC lineages, of which one, L4.6-Uganda, is clearly derived and hence recent. We quantified TB severity using the Bandim TBscore and examined the interaction between MTBC lineage and human single-nucleotide polymorphisms (SNPs) genome-wide, in two independent cohorts of TB cases (n = 149 and n = 127). We found a significant interaction between an SNP in PPIAP2 and the Uganda lineage (combined p = 4 × 10−8). PPIAP2 is a pseudogene that is highly expressed in immune cells. Pathway and eQTL analyses indicated potential roles between coevolving SNPs and cellular replication and metabolism as well as platelet aggregation and coagulation. This finding provides further evidence that host–pathogen interactions affect clinical presentation differently than host and pathogen genetic variation independently, and that human–MTBC coevolution is likely to explain patterns of disease severity.

Highlights

  • Pulmonary tuberculosis (TB) creates a large global public health burden, with 10 million active TB cases and 1.5 million deaths in 2020 [1]

  • Almost half (44%) of TB cases worldwide occur in sub-Saharan Africa

  • The bacterium, Mycobacterium tuberculosis (MTB), which is transmitted via airborne droplets, causes most TB

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Summary

Introduction

Pulmonary tuberculosis (TB) creates a large global public health burden, with 10 million active TB cases and 1.5 million deaths in 2020 [1]. While the global incidence of TB has generally trended downwards, TB continues to be a major driver of infectious disease mortality, and is a re-emerging infectious disease in Southeast Asia and sub-Saharan Africa [2]. Almost half (44%) of TB cases worldwide occur in sub-Saharan Africa. The bacterium, Mycobacterium tuberculosis (MTB), which is transmitted via airborne droplets, causes most TB. Despite these troubling numbers, TB morbidity and mortality are not as injurious as they could be, as one-fourth to one-third of the entire globe is thought to be latently (asymptomatically) infected but only a small fraction of this number presents with disease

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