Mycobacterium tuberculosis impairs human memory CD4+ T cell recognition of M2 but not M1-like macrophages.

Journal: IScience
Published:
Abstract

Direct recognition of Mycobacterium tuberculosis (Mtb)-infected cells is required for protection by CD4+ T cells. While impaired T cell recognition of Mtb-infected macrophages was demonstrated in mice, data are lacking for humans. Using T cells and monocyte-derived macrophages (MDMs) from individuals with latent Mtb infection (LTBI), we quantified the frequency of memory CD4+ T cell activation in response to autologous MDMs infected with virulent Mtb. We observed robust T cell activation in response to Mtb infection of M1-like macrophages differentiated using GM-CSF, while M2-like macrophages differentiated using M-CSF were poorly recognized. However, non-infected GM-CSF and M-CSF MDMs loaded with exogenous antigens elicited similar CD4+ T cell activation. IL-10 was preferentially secreted by infected M-CSF MDMs, and neutralization improved T cell activation. These results suggest that preferential infection of macrophages with an M2-like phenotype limits T cell-mediated protection against Mtb. Vaccine development should focus on T cell recognition of Mtb-infected macrophages.

Authors
Daniel Gail, Vinicius Suzart, Weinan Du, Avinaash Kaur Sandhu, Jessica Jarvela, Mary Nantongo, Ivan Mwebaza, Soumya Panigrahi, Michael Freeman, David Canaday, W Boom, Richard Silver, Stephen Carpenter
Relevant Conditions

HIV/AIDS