Title
Host transcriptional response to TB preventive therapy differentiates two sub-groups of IGRA-positive individuals
Date Issued
01 March 2021
Access level
open access
Resource Type
journal article
Author(s)
London School of Hygiene and Tropical Medicine
Publisher(s)
Churchill Livingstone
Abstract
We hypothesised that individuals with immunological sensitisation to Mycobacterium tuberculosis (Mtb), conventionally regarded as evidence of latent tuberculosis infection (LTBI), would demonstrate binary responses to preventive therapy (PT), reflecting the differential immunological consequences of the sterilisation of viable infection in those with active Mtb infection versus no Mtb killing in those who did not harbour viable bacilli. We investigated longitudinal whole blood transcriptional profile responses to PT of Interferon gamma release assay (IGRA)-positive tuberculosis contacts and IGRA-negative, tuberculosis-unexposed controls. Longitudinal unsupervised clustering analysis with a subset of 474 most variable genes in antigen-stimulated blood separated the IGRA-positive participants into two distinct subgroups, one of which clustered with the IGRA-negative controls. 117 probes were differentially expressed over time between the two cluster groups, many of them associated with immunological pathways important in mycobacterial control. We contend that the differential host RNA response reflects lack of Mtb viability in the group that clustered with the IGRA-negative unexposed controls, and Mtb viability in the group (1/3 of IGRA-positives) that clustered away. Gene expression patterns in the blood of IGRA-positive individuals emerging during the course of PT, which reflect Mtb viability, could have major implications in the identification of risk of progression, treatment stratification and biomarker development.
Volume
127
Language
English
OCDE Knowledge area
Salud pública, Salud ambiental
Enfermedades infecciosas
Sistema respiratorio
Subjects
Scopus EID
2-s2.0-85100004065
PubMed ID
Source
Tuberculosis
ISSN of the container
14729792
Sponsor(s)
This work was supported by a British Infection Association Small Project Research Grant ( 2016 ) and a Rosetrees Trust Seed Corn Award (# JS15/M660 ). C.B. was funded by an Academic Clinical Fellowship from the National Institute for Health Research (NIHR) ( ACF-2012-18-008 ) and currently receives support from an Imperial 4i Wellcome Trust/NIHR Imperial BRC Clinical PhD Fellowship. M.K. receives support from the NIHR Imperial College BRC and the Wellcome Trust (Sir Henry Wellcome Fellowship grant no. 206508/Z/17/Z ). J.C. receives support from the Medical Research Council Newton Fund (# MR/P017568/1 ). The funders were not involved in study design, data collection and analysis, decision to publish, nor in preparation of the manuscript.
The authors wish to thank the patients and volunteers who participated in the study. We also thank the clinical staff at Barts Health NHS Trust, Homerton University Hospital Foundation Trust and TB Service North Central London, in particular Dr Heinke Kunst (Barts Health NHS Trust), Prof Graham Bothamley (Homerton University Hospital Foundation Trust) and Prof Marc Lipman (TB Service North Central London) for facilitating recruitment. The authors also wish to thank the research nurses who assisted with this study, including Victoria Dean, Michelle Berin (University College London) and Nirmala Ghimire (Barts Health), as well as Ortensia Vito and Dominic Habgood-Coote (Imperial College London) for help with data analysis. This work was supported by a British Infection Association Small Project Research Grant (2016) and a Rosetrees Trust Seed Corn Award (# JS15/M660). C.B. was funded by an Academic Clinical Fellowship from the National Institute for Health Research (NIHR) (ACF-2012-18-008) and currently receives support from an Imperial 4i Wellcome Trust/NIHR Imperial BRC Clinical PhD Fellowship. M.K. receives support from the NIHR Imperial College BRC and the Wellcome Trust (Sir Henry Wellcome Fellowship grant no. 206508/Z/17/Z). J.C. receives support from the Medical Research Council Newton Fund (#MR/P017568/1). The funders were not involved in study design, data collection and analysis, decision to publish, nor in preparation of the manuscript.
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