“It’s a global health disaster waiting to happen, even here in Canada, but this new paradigm in TB research may offer an immediate opportunity to improve vaccination and treatment initiatives,” explains Dr. Maziar Divangahi
Often causing no symptoms in carriers of the disease, worldwide
tuberculosis (TB) infects eight to ten million people every year,
kills two million, and it is highly contagious as it is spread
through coughing and sneezing. “It’s a global health disaster
waiting to happen, even here in Canada, but this new paradigm in TB
research may offer an immediate opportunity to improve vaccination
and treatment initiatives,” explains Dr. Maziar Divangahi of McGill
University and of the Research Institute of the McGill University
Health Centre.
The ability of TB bacteria to persist in individuals with
apparently normal immune systems implies that they have developed
strategies to avoid, evade, and even subvert immunity. The bacteria
mainly enter the body through inhalation into the respiratory
tract. Alveolar macrophages, a type of white blood cell residing in
our lungs, initially recognize the bacteria and engulf them. This
process is one of our immune system’s defense mechanisms. However,
TB has evolved into a parasite that can survive and replicate
inside the macrophages until they burst out, spreading the
infection.
The way infected macrophages die is a determining factor in the
development of immunity to TB. Macrophages can induce apoptosis, a
type of cell death which keeps their membrane intact, trapping and
reducing bacterial viability. However, TB bacteria induce another
type of cell death called necrosis. Necrosis causes cell death by
disrupting the cell membranes, which enables the bacteria to escape
the cell. It may help to visualize a box with broken walls.
The key to the fate of the macrophages is the balance between
two kinds of eicosanoids. Eicosanoids are molecules that contribute
to the control of our immune system. The genetic code of TB
bacteria enables it to tip this balance in favor of necrosis, and
human genetic analysis revealed that modification in eicosanoids
production is associated with susceptibility or resistance to TB.
Fortunately, drugs that target the production of eicosanoids are
already in use for treating other inflammatory diseases, such as
rheumatoid arthritis.
“The next steps will be to see exactly how these drugs can be
used to treat TB,” said Divangahi. The research received funding
from the Fonds de la Recherche en Santé du Québec and was published
in Nature Immunology. Divangahi is affiliated with the Departments
of Medicine and Microbiology/Immunology of McGill’s Faculty of
Medicine, with the Research Institute of the McGill University
Health Centre, and with the Meakins-Christie Laboratory.
Web: Dr. Divangahi’s Homepage at McGill’s Meakins-Christie
Laboratories website: http://meakins.mcgill.ca/divangahi.php
Also of interest: McGill researchers publish an editorial in
Expert Reviews of Respiratory Medicine about the increased risk of
a TB epidemic following the earthquake in Haiti : http://www.expert-reviews.com/doi/full/10.1586/ers.10.41