Dynamics of cytokine generation in patients with active pulmonary tuberculosis
- 1 June 2003
- journal article
- review article
- Published by Wolters Kluwer Health in Current Opinion in Infectious Diseases
- Vol. 16 (3) , 205-210
- https://doi.org/10.1097/00001432-200306000-00004
Abstract
Cytokines have been implicated in the protective immunity, pathophysiology and development of tuberculosis. Most people who become infected with Mycobacterium tuberculosis mount an effective protective immune response, but 5-10% develop disease. Active pulmonary tuberculosis can be considered to reflect an ineffective immune response against mycobacterial infection. A better understanding of how cytokine production contributes to immunity and pathology would aid the development of new vaccines and therapeutic strategies. At the time of diagnosis, production of M. tuberculosis or mycobacterial antigen-induced interferon-gamma by peripheral blood mononuclear cells from tuberculosis patients is usually depressed, compared with that of healthy control subjects, whereas cytokine production at the site of disease is elevated. In most patients, depressed interferon-gamma production by peripheral blood mononuclear cells seems to be a transient response because it is significantly increased in most active tuberculosis patients during and following successful antituberculous therapy. However, some patients remain anergic in vivo and in vitro after chemotherapy, and the underlying biochemical mechanisms for T cell anergy in modulating protection or pathology in tuberculosis needs further clarification. Among the cytokines contributing to protective immunity, interleukins 12 and 18, and tumour necrosis factor-alpha are important, the basis of recent studies with tuberculosis patients. A more complete understanding of cytokine dynamics in individual cells in active pulmonary tuberculosis patients will provide further knowledge about immunopathogenesis and protective immunity in human tuberculosis. This should ultimately enhance development of preventive and therapeutic strategies against this enormously successful intracellular pathogen.Keywords
This publication has 44 references indexed in Scilit:
- Serum Cytokine Concentrations Do Not ParallelMycobacterium tuberculosis–Induced Cytokine Production in Patients with TuberculosisClinical Infectious Diseases, 2003
- T-Cell Responses to theMycobacterium tuberculosis-Specific Antigen ESAT-6 in Brazilian Tuberculosis PatientsInfection and Immunity, 2002
- Shifts of T4/T8 T Lymphocytes from BAL Fluid and Peripheral Blood by Clinical Grade in Patients with Pulmonary TuberculosisChest, 2002
- Active tuberculosis in Africa is associated with reduced Th1 and increased Th2 activity in vivoEuropean Journal of Immunology, 2002
- Cytokine profiles using whole-blood assays can discriminate between tuberculosis patients and healthy endemic controls in a BCG-vaccinated populationJournal of Immunological Methods, 2002
- Depressed Interleukin-12 (IL-12), but not IL-18, Production in Response to a 30- or 32-Kilodalton Mycobacterial Antigen in Patients with Active Pulmonary TuberculosisInfection and Immunity, 2000
- Type 1 Cytokines and the Pathogenesis of TuberculosisAmerican Journal of Respiratory and Critical Care Medicine, 2000
- Dysregulated Production of Interferon-gamma, Interleukin-4 and Interleukin-6 in Early Tuberculosis Patients in Response to Antigen 85B of Mycobacterium tuberculosisScandinavian Journal of Immunology, 2000
- Sequestration of T Lymphocytes to Body Fluids in Tuberculosis: Reversal of Anergy following ChemotherapyThe Journal of Infectious Diseases, 1999
- A Mutation in the Interferon-γ –Receptor Gene and Susceptibility to Mycobacterial InfectionNew England Journal of Medicine, 1996