A first indication of the biological role of mucosal associated invariant T (MAIT) cells reveals that this discrete T cell subset is broadly reactive to bacterial infection. In particular MAIT cells recognize Mycobacterium tuberculosis-infected lung airway epithelial cells via the most evolutionarily conserved major histocompatibility molecule.
These guidelines are not intended to impose a standard of care. They provide the basis for rational decisions in the diagnosis of tuberculosis in the context of the existing evidence. No guidelines can take into account all of the often compelling unique individual clinical circumstances.
Background
Individuals infected with Mycobacterium tuberculosis (Mtb) may develop symptoms and signs of disease (tuberculosis disease) or may have no clinical evidence of disease (latent tuberculosis infection [LTBI]). Tuberculosis disease is a leading cause of infectious disease morbidity and mortality worldwide, yet many questions related to its diagnosis remain.
Methods
A task force supported by the American Thoracic Society, Centers for Disease Control and Prevention, and Infectious Diseases Society of America searched, selected, and synthesized relevant evidence. The evidence was then used as the basis for recommendations about the diagnosis of tuberculosis disease and LTBI in adults and children. The recommendations were formulated, written, and graded using the Grading, Recommendations, Assessment, Development and Evaluation (GRADE) approach.
Results
Twenty-three evidence-based recommendations about diagnostic testing for latent tuberculosis infection, pulmonary tuberculosis, and extrapulmonary tuberculosis are provided. Six of the recommendations are strong, whereas the remaining 17 are conditional.
Conclusions
These guidelines are not intended to impose a standard of care. They provide the basis for rational decisions in the diagnosis of tuberculosis in the context of the existing evidence. No guidelines can take into account all of the often compelling unique individual clinical circumstances.
The introduction and expression of genes in somatic cells is an innovative therapy for correcting genetic deficiency diseases and augmenting immune function. A potential obstacle to gene therapy is the elimination of such gene-modified cells by an immune response to novel protein products of the introduced genes. We are conducting an immunotherapy trial in which individuals seropositive for human immunodeficiency virus (HIV) receive CD8+ HIV-specific cytotoxic T cells modified by retroviral transduction to express a gene permitting positive and negative selection. However, five of six subjects developed cytotoxic T-lymphocyte responses specific for the novel protein and eliminated the transduced cytotoxic T cells. The rejection of genetically modified cells by these immunocompromised hosts suggests that strategies to render gene-modified cells less susceptible to host immune surveillance will be required for successful gene therapy of immunocompetent hosts.
MAIT cells can discriminate between pathogen-derived ligands in a clonotype-dependent manner, and the TCR repertoire is distinct within individuals, indicating that the MAIT cell repertoire is shaped by prior microbial exposure.
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