Tuberculosis has great public health impact with high rates of mortality and the only
prophylactic measure for it is the Mycobacterium bovisbacillus
Calmette-Guérin (BCG) vaccine. The present study evaluated the release of cytokines
[interleukin (IL)-1, tumour necrosis factor and IL-6] and chemokines [macrophage
inflammatory protein (MIP)-1α and MIP-1β] by THP-1 derived
macrophages infected with BCG vaccine obtained by growing mycobacteria in Viscondessa
de Moraes Institute medium medium (oral) or Sauton medium (intradermic) to compare
the effects of live and heat-killed (HK) mycobacteria. Because BCG has been reported
to lose viability during the lyophilisation process and during storage, we examined
whether exposing BCG to different temperatures also triggers differences in the
expression of some important cytokines and chemokines of the immune response.
Interestingly, we observed that HK mycobacteria stimulated cytokine and chemokine
production in a different pattern from that observed with live mycobacteria.
The Bacille Calmette-Guérin (BCG) vaccine comprises a family of genetically different strains derived by the loss of genomic regions (RDs) and other mutations. In BCG Moreau, loss of RD16 inactivates rv3405c
* , encoding a transcriptional repressor that negatively regulates the expression of Rv3406, an alkyl sulfatase. To evaluate the impact of this loss on the BCG and host cell viability and the cytokine profile, THP-1 cells were infected with BCG Moreau (harbouring the empty vector) and a complemented strain carrying a functional copy of rv3405c. Viability of the host cells and bacteria as well as the pattern of cytokine secretion were evaluated. Our results show that the viability of BCG Moreau is higher than that of the complemented strain in an axenic medium, suggesting a possible functional gain associated with the constitutive expression of Rv3406. Viability of the host cells did not vary significantly between recombinant strains, but differences in the profiles of the cytokine secretion (IL-1β and IL-6) were observed. Our results suggest an example of a functional gain due to gene loss contributing to the elucidation of the impact of RD16 on the physiology of BCG Moreau.
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