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Am. J. Respir. Crit. Care Med. · Jul 2018
Comparative StudyPlatelets Regulate Pulmonary Inflammation and Tissue Destruction in Tuberculosis.
- Katharine A Fox, Daniela E Kirwan, Ashley M Whittington, Nitya Krishnan, Brian D Robertson, Robert H Gilman, José W López, Shivani Singh, Joanna C Porter, and Jon S Friedland.
- 1 Infectious Diseases and Immunity, Wellcome Trust Centre for Global Health Research, and.
- Am. J. Respir. Crit. Care Med. 2018 Jul 15; 198 (2): 245255245-255.
RationalePlatelets may interact with the immune system in tuberculosis (TB) to regulate human inflammatory responses that lead to morbidity and spread of infection.ObjectivesTo identify a functional role of platelets in the innate inflammatory and matrix-degrading response in TB.MethodsMarkers of platelet activation were examined in plasma from 50 patients with TB before treatment and 50 control subjects. Twenty-five patients were followed longitudinally. Platelet-monocyte interactions were studied in a coculture model infected with live, virulent Mycobacterium tuberculosis (M.tb) and dissected using qRT-PCR, Luminex multiplex arrays, matrix degradation assays, and colony counts. Immunohistochemistry detected CD41 (cluster of differentiation 41) expression in a pulmonary TB murine model, and secreted platelet factors were measured in BAL fluid from 15 patients with TB and matched control subjects.Measurements And Main ResultsFive of six platelet-associated mediators were upregulated in plasma of patients with TB compared with control subjects, with concentrations returning to baseline by Day 60 of treatment. Gene expression of the monocyte collagenase MMP-1 (matrix metalloproteinase-1) was upregulated by platelets in M.tb infection. Platelets also enhanced M.tb-induced MMP-1 and -10 secretion, which drove type I collagen degradation. Platelets increased monocyte IL-1 and IL-10 and decreased IL-12 and MDC (monocyte-derived chemokine; also known as CCL-22) secretion, as consistent with an M2 monocyte phenotype. Monocyte killing of intracellular M.tb was decreased. In the lung, platelets were detected in a TB mouse model, and secreted platelet mediators were upregulated in human BAL fluid and correlated with MMP and IL-1β concentrations.ConclusionsPlatelets drive a proinflammatory, tissue-degrading phenotype in TB.
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