Tuberculosis (TB) is a leading cause of mortality due to infectious disease, but the factors determining disease progression are unclear. Transcriptional signatures associated with type I IFN signalling and neutrophilic inflammation were shown to correlate with disease severity in mouse models of TB. Here we show that similar transcriptional signatures correlate with increased bacterial loads and exacerbate pathology during Mycobacterium tuberculosis infection upon GM-CSF blockade. Loss of GM-CSF signalling or genetic susceptibility to TB (C3HeB/FeJ mice) result in type I IFN-induced neutrophil extracellular trap (NET) formation that promotes bacterial growth and promotes disease severity. Consistently, NETs are present in necrotic lung lesions of TB patients responding poorly to antibiotic therapy, supporting the role of NETs in a late stage of TB pathogenesis. Our findings reveal an important cytokine-based innate immune effector network with a central role in determining the outcome of M. tuberculosis infection.
Although mouse infection models have been extensively used to study the
host response to
Mycobacterium tuberculosis
, their validity in
revealing determinants of human TB resistance and disease progression has been
heavily debated. Here, we show that the modular transcriptional signature in the
blood of susceptible mice infected with a clinical isolate of
M.
tuberculosis
resembles that of active human tuberculosis disease,
with a dominance of a type I IFN response and neutrophil activation and
recruitment, together with a loss in B lymphocyte, NK and T cell effector
responses. In addition, resistant but not susceptible strains of mice show
increased lung B, NK and T cell effector responses in the lung upon infection.
Importantly, the blood signature of active disease shared by mice and humans is
also evident in latent tuberculosis progressors before diagnosis suggesting that
these responses both predict and contribute to the pathogenesis of progressive
M. tuberculosis
infection.
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