5 research outputs found

    Aggregation state of Mycobacterium tuberculosis impacts host immunity and augments pulmonary disease pathology

    Get PDF
    Kolloli et al. examine whether aggregation contributes to enhanced pathogenicity of Mycobacterium tuberculosis in a rabbit model of pulmonary infection. They demonstrate that aggregation increases the ability of M. tuberculosis to grow robustly and promote inflammation and host cell death in the rabbit lungs, thus increasing disease burden

    Cyclooxygenase inhibitors impair CD4 T cell immunity and exacerbate Mycobacterium tuberculosis infection in aerosol-challenged mice

    Get PDF
    Tuberculosis, caused by infection with Mycobacterium tuberculosis (Mtb), kills over 1.6 million people each year despite availability of antibiotics. The increase in drug resistant Mtb strains is a major public health emergency and host-directed therapy as adjunct to antibiotic treatment has gained increased interest. Cyclooxygenase inhibitors (COXi) are frequently used drugs to alleviate tuberculosis related symptoms. Mouse studies of acute intravenous Mtb infection have suggested a potential benefit of COXi for host-directed therapy. Here we show that COXi treatment (ibuprofen and celecoxib) is detrimental to Mtb control in different mouse models of respiratory infection. This effect links to impairments of the Type-1 helper (Th1) T-cell response as CD4 T-cells in COXi-treated animals have significantly decreased Th1 differentiation, reduced IFNγ expression and decreased protective capacity upon adoptive transfer. If confirmed in clinical trials, these findings could have major impact on global health and question the use of COXi for host-directed therapy.publishedVersio

    Clinical Management of Drug-resistant Mycobacterium tuberculosis Strains: Pathogen-targeted Versus Host-directed Treatment Approaches

    No full text
    corecore