No impact of helminth coinfection in patients with smear positive tuberculosis on immunoglobulin levels using a novel method measuring Mycobacterium tuberculosis-specific antibodies.

Giggil Pushpamithran, Camilla Skoglund, Fanny Olsson, Melissa Méndez-Aranda, Thomas Schön, Mårten Segelmark, Olle Stendahl, Robert H Gilman, Robert Blomgran
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Abstract

Helminth/tuberculosis (TB)-coinfection can reduce cell-mediated immunity against Mycobacterium tuberculosis (Mtb) and increase disease severity, although the effects are highly helminth species dependent. Mtb have long been ranked as the number one single infectious agent claiming the most lives. The only licensed vaccine for TB (BCG) offers highly variable protection against TB, and almost no protection against transmission of Mtb. In recent few years the identification of naturally occurring antibodies in humans that are protective during Mtb infection has reignited the interest in adaptive humoral immunity against TB and its possible implementation in novel TB vaccine design. The effects of helminth/TB coinfection on the humoral response against Mtb during active pulmonary TB are however still unclear, and specifically the effect by globally prevalent helminth species such as Ascaris lumbricoides, Strongyloides stercoralis, Ancylostoma duodenale, Trichuris trichiura. Plasma samples from smear positive TB patients were used to measure both total and Mtb-specific antibody responses in a Peruvian endemic setting where these helminths are dominating. Mtb-specific antibodies were detected by a novel approach coating ELISA-plates with a Mtb cell-membrane fraction (CDC1551) that contains a broad range of Mtb surface proteins. Compared to controls without helminths or TB, helminth/TB coinfected patients had high levels of Mtb-specific IgG (including an IgG1 and IgG2 subclass response) and IgM, which were similarly increased in TB patients without helminth infection. These data, indicate that helminth/TB coinfected have a sustained humoral response against Mtb at the level of active TB only. More studies on the species-specific impact of helminths on the adaptive humoral response against Mtb using a larger sample size, and in relation to TB disease severity, are needed.

Abstract Image

Abstract Image

使用一种新的方法测量结核分枝杆菌特异性抗体,对涂阳结核患者寄生虫合并感染对免疫球蛋白水平的影响。
蠕虫/结核病(TB)合并感染可降低针对结核分枝杆菌(Mtb)的细胞介导免疫,并增加疾病严重程度,尽管这种影响高度依赖于蠕虫种类。长期以来,结核分枝杆菌一直被列为夺去最多生命的头号单一传染性病原体。唯一获得许可的结核病疫苗(卡介苗)对结核病提供高度可变的保护,对结核的传播几乎没有保护。近年来,在人体内自然产生的抗体在结核分枝杆菌感染期间具有保护作用,这重新点燃了人们对抗结核适应性体液免疫及其在新型结核疫苗设计中可能实施的兴趣。然而,在活动性肺结核期间,寄生虫/结核共同感染对抗结核体液反应的影响尚不清楚,特别是全球流行的蠕虫物种,如蚓蛔虫、粪圆线虫、十二指肠钩虫、毛滴虫的影响。在这些寄生虫占主导地位的秘鲁流行环境中,使用涂阳结核病患者的血浆样本来测量总抗体和mtb特异性抗体反应。Mtb特异性抗体是通过一种新的方法,用含有广泛Mtb表面蛋白的Mtb细胞膜组分(CDC1551)涂覆elisa板来检测的。与没有蠕虫或结核病的对照组相比,蠕虫/结核病共感染患者具有高水平的mtb特异性IgG(包括IgG1和IgG2亚类反应)和IgM,在没有蠕虫感染的结核病患者中也同样增加。这些数据表明,蠕虫/结核共感染仅在活动性结核水平上对结核有持续的体液反应。需要使用更大的样本量,并根据结核病的严重程度,更多地研究蠕虫对抗结核的适应性体液反应的物种特异性影响。
本文章由计算机程序翻译,如有差异,请以英文原文为准。
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