Mycobacterium tuberculosis (Mtb) causes 1.5 million deaths annually. Active tuberculosis correlates with a neutrophil-driven type I interferon (IFN) signature, but the underlying cellular mechanisms remain poorly understood. We found that interstitial macrophages (IMs) and plasmacytoid dendritic cells (pDCs) are dominant producers of type I IFN during Mtb infection in mice and non-human primates, and pDCs localize near human Mtb granulomas. Depletion of pDCs reduces Mtb burdens, implicating pDCs in tuberculosis pathogenesis. During IFN-driven disease, we observe abundant DNA-containing neutrophil extracellular traps (NETs) known to activate pDCs. Single cell RNA-seq indicates that type I IFNs act on IMs to impair their responses to IFN gamma, a cytokine critical for Mtb control. Cell type-specific disruption of the type I IFN receptor suggests IFNs act on IMs to inhibit Mtb control. We propose pDC-derived type I IFNs, driven by NETs, act on IMs to drive bacterial replication, further neutrophil recruitment, and active tuberculosis disease.
MYB nuclear staining may prove useful in separating ACC from PA and BCA, especially in limited cellular samples. Diagn. Cytopathol. 2016;44:799-804. © 2016 Wiley Periodicals, Inc.
BackgroundTetracyclines are broad-spectrum antibiotics that are also used to induce gene expression using the reverse tetracycline transactivator / tetracycline operator system (rtTA/tetO system). The system assumes that tetracyclines have no effects on mammals. However, a number of studies suggest that tetracyclines may have powerful anti-inflammatory effects. We report that the tetracycline, doxycycline, inhibits neutrophil (PMN) influx into the lungs of mice treated with bacterial endotoxin (LPS).MethodsMice were challenged with intratracheal LPS in the presence or absence of doxycyline. bronchoalveolar lavage cell counts and differential, total bronchoalveolar lavage protein, lung homogenate caspase-3 and tissue imaging were used to assess lung injury. In addition, PMN chemotaxis was measured in vitro and syndecan-1 was measured in bronchoalveolar lavage fluid.ResultsThe administration of doxycycline resulted in a significant decrease in the number of bronchoalveolar lavage PMNs in LPS-treated mice. Doxycycline had no effect on other markers of lung injury such as total bronchoalveolar lavage protein and whole lung caspase-3 activity. However, doxycycline resulted in a decrease in shed syndecan-1 in bronchoalveolar lavage fluid.ConclusionWe conclude that doxycycline has an important anti-inflammatory effect that can potentially confound the experiments in which the rtTA/tetO system is being used to study the immune response.
Background: The presence of measurable residual disease after therapy is a significant risk factor of relapse in patients with acute myeloid leukemia (AML). By detecting cells with leukemia-associated immunophenotype (LAIP), multiparameter flow cytometry (MFC) can detect residual leukemia at a level significantly lower than that detected by morphology. However, changes in LAIPs during or after therapy may pose a challenge to MRD testing. AML with mutated NPM1 represents the largest subtype of AML sharing a common leukemogenic mechanism and similar LAIPs. Here, we identified a common pattern of LAIPs in myeloid blasts with mutated NPM1, and studied its stability and limit of detection after therapy.Methods: We summarized aberrancies of leukemic blasts with mutated NPM1 at diagnosis in 61 patients and paired relapse in 25 patients. In addition, we examined the detection of leukemic blasts in 590 specimens collected from 152 patients in complete remission after induction for AML/MDS-EB with mutated NPM1.Results: Our findings demonstrate myeloid blasts with mutated NPM1 have a characteristic pattern of LAIPs that is present in nearly all cases of AML/MDS-EB with mutated NPM1 at initial diagnosis and relapse, regardless of morphologic variations, FLT3 ITD status, or karyotype abnormality. The myeloid blasts with mutated NPM1 can be detected at an approximate level of 0.1% of total leukocytes in morphologic remission with high specificity validated by clinical outcome.Conclusion: The characteristic pattern of LAIPs of myeloid blasts with mutated NPM1 is common and stable, and allows sensitive and specific detection of AML or MDS with mutated NPM1 after therapy.
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