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34


Anti-Mycobacterials and Micro-Aspiration Drive Lower Airway Dysbiosis in NTM Bronchiectasis [Meeting Abstract]

Singh, S.; Hoque, A.; Sulaiman, I.; Li, Y.; Wu, B.; Chang, M.; Kyeremateng, Y.; Collazo, D. E.; Kamelhar, D.; Addrizzo-Harris, D. J.; Segal, L. N.
ISI:000792480401435
ISSN: 1073-449x
CID: 5238232

Chronic Lower Airway Dysbiosis with Human Oral Commensals Leads to Both Increased IL-17A and Immune Exhaustion Tone in the Lower Airways [Meeting Abstract]

Chang, M.; Kyeremateng, Y.; Collazo, D.; Kocak, I.; Singh, S.; Li, Y.; Tsay, J.; Segal, L. N.; Wu, B. G.
ISI:000792480401571
ISSN: 1073-449x
CID: 5238222

A century of BCG vaccination: Immune mechanisms, animal models, non-traditional routes and implications for COVID-19

Singh, Shivani; Saavedra-Avila, Noemi Alejandra; Tiwari, Sangeeta; Porcelli, Steven A
Bacillus Calmette-Guerin (BCG) has been used as a vaccine against tuberculosis since 1921 and remains the only currently approved vaccine for this infection. The recent discovery that BCG protects against initial infection, and not just against progression from latent to active disease, has significant implications for ongoing research into the immune mechanisms that are relevant to generate a solid host defense against Mycobacterium tuberculosis (Mtb). In this review, we first explore the different components of immunity that are augmented after BCG vaccination. Next, we summarize current efforts to improve the efficacy of BCG through the development of recombinant strains, heterologous prime-boost approaches and the deployment of non-traditional routes. These efforts have included the development of new recombinant BCG strains, and various strategies for expression of important antigens such as those deleted during the M. bovis attenuation process or antigens that are present only in Mtb. BCG is typically administered via the intradermal route, raising questions about whether this could account for its apparent failure to generate long-lasting immunological memory in the lungs and the inconsistent level of protection against pulmonary tuberculosis in adults. Recent years have seen a resurgence of interest in the mucosal and intravenous delivery routes as they have been shown to induce a better immune response both in the systemic and mucosal compartments. Finally, we discuss the potential benefits of the ability of BCG to confer trained immunity in a non-specific manner by broadly stimulating a host immunity resulting in a generalized survival benefit in neonates and the elderly, while potentially offering benefits for the control of new and emerging infectious diseases such as COVID-19. Given that BCG will likely continue to be widely used well into the future, it remains of critical importance to better understand the immune responses driven by it and how to leverage these for the design of improved vaccination strategies against tuberculosis.
PMCID:9459386
PMID: 36091032
ISSN: 1664-3224
CID: 5324922

Balancing Benefits and Risks: Do Inhaled Corticosteroids Modify the Lung Microbiome? [Comment]

Singh, Shivani; Pragman, Alexa A; Segal, Leopoldo N
PMID: 34554893
ISSN: 1535-4970
CID: 5063092

Platelets Regulate Pulmonary Inflammation and Tissue Destruction in Tuberculosis

Fox, Katharine A; Kirwan, Daniela E; Whittington, Ashley M; Krishnan, Nitya; Robertson, Brian D; Gilman, Robert H; López, José W; Singh, Shivani; Porter, Joanna C; Friedland, Jon S
RATIONALE:Platelets may interact with the immune system in tuberculosis (TB) to regulate human inflammatory responses that lead to morbidity and spread of infection. OBJECTIVES:To identify a functional role of platelets in the innate inflammatory and matrix-degrading response in TB. METHODS:Markers 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 RESULTS:Five 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. CONCLUSIONS:Platelets drive a proinflammatory, tissue-degrading phenotype in TB.
PMID: 29420060
ISSN: 1535-4970
CID: 4958662

Interleukin-17 regulates matrix metalloproteinase activity in human pulmonary tuberculosis

Singh, Shivani; Maniakis-Grivas, George; Singh, Utpal K; Asher, Radha M; Mauri, Francesco; Elkington, Paul T; Friedland, Jon S
Tuberculosis (TB) is characterized by extensive pulmonary matrix breakdown. Interleukin-17 (IL-17) is key in host defence in TB but its role in TB-driven tissue damage is unknown. We investigated the hypothesis that respiratory stromal cell matrix metalloproteinase (MMP) production in TB is regulated by T-helper 17 (TH -17) cytokines. Biopsies of patients with pulmonary TB were analysed by immunohistochemistry (IHC), and patient bronchoalveolar lavage fluid (BALF) MMP and cytokine concentrations were measured by Luminex assays. Primary human airway epithelial cells were stimulated with conditioned medium from human monocytes infected with Mycobacterium tuberculosis (Mtb) and TH -17 cytokines. MMP secretion, activity, and gene expression were determined by ELISA, Luminex assay, zymography, RT-qPCR, and dual luciferase reporter assays. Signalling pathways were examined using phospho-western analysis and siRNA. IL-17 is expressed in TB patient granulomas and MMP-3 is expressed in adjacent pulmonary epithelial cells. IL-17 had a divergent, concentration-dependent effect on MMP secretion, increasing epithelial secretion of MMP-3 (p < 0.001) over 72 h, whilst decreasing that of MMP-9 (p < 0.0001); mRNA levels were similarly affected. Both IL-17 and IL-22 increased fibroblast Mtb-dependent MMP-3 secretion but IL-22 did not modulate epithelial MMP-3 expression. Both IL-17 and IL-22, but not IL-23, were significantly up-regulated in BALF from TB patients. IL-17-driven MMP-3 was dependent on p38 MAP kinase and the PI3K p110α subunit. In summary, IL-17 drives airway stromal cell-derived MMP-3, a mediator of tissue destruction in TB, alone and with monocyte-dependent networks in TB. This is regulated by p38 MAP kinase and PI3K pathways. © 2017 The Authors. The Journal of Pathology published by John Wiley & Sons Ltd on behalf of Pathological Society of Great Britain and Ireland.
PMCID:5838784
PMID: 29210073
ISSN: 1096-9896
CID: 4958652

The Breadth and Spectrum of Antigen Recognition After BCG Vaccination and M. Tuberculosis (Mtb) Infection [Meeting Abstract]

Singh, S.; Bolz, M.; Cornelius, A. R.; Ernst, J. D.
ISI:000449978905371
ISSN: 1073-449x
CID: 3513182

Early Secretory Antigenic Target-6 Drives Matrix Metalloproteinase-10 Gene Expression and Secretion in Tuberculosis

Brilha, Sara; Sathyamoorthy, Tarangini; Stuttaford, Laura H; Walker, Naomi F; Wilkinson, Robert J; Singh, Shivani; Moores, Rachel C; Elkington, Paul T; Friedland, Jon S
Tuberculosis (TB) causes disease worldwide, and multidrug resistance is an increasing problem. Matrix metalloproteinases (MMPs), particularly the collagenase MMP-1, cause lung extracellular matrix destruction, which drives disease transmission and morbidity. The role in such tissue damage of the stromelysin MMP-10, a key activator of the collagenase MMP-1, was investigated in direct Mycobacterium tuberculosis (Mtb)-infected macrophages and in conditioned medium from Mtb-infected monocyte-stimulated cells. Mtb infection increased MMP-10 secretion from primary human macrophages 29-fold, whereas Mtb-infected monocytes increased secretion by 4.5-fold from pulmonary epithelial cells and 10.5-fold from fibroblasts. Inhibition of MMP-10 activity decreased collagen breakdown. In two independent cohorts of patients with TB from different continents, MMP-10 was increased in both induced sputum and bronchoalveolar lavage fluid compared with control subjects and patients with other respiratory diseases (both P < 0.05). Mtb drove 3.5-fold greater MMP-10 secretion from human macrophages than the vaccine strain bacillus Calmette-Guerin (P < 0.001), whereas both mycobacteria up-regulated TNF-α secretion equally. Using overlapping, short, linear peptides covering the sequence of early secretory antigenic target-6, a virulence factor secreted by Mtb, but not bacillus Calmette-Guerin, we found that stimulation of human macrophages with a single specific 15-amino acid peptide sequence drove threefold greater MMP-10 secretion than any other peptide (P < 0.001). Mtb-driven MMP-10 secretion was inhibited in a dose-dependent manner by p38 and extracellular signal-related kinase mitogen-activated protein kinase blockade (P < 0.001 and P < 0.01 respectively), but it was not affected by inhibition of NF-κB. In summary, Mtb activates inflammatory and stromal cells to secrete MMP-10, and this is partly driven by the virulence factor early secretory antigenic target-6, implicating it in TB-associated tissue destruction.
PMCID:5359650
PMID: 27654284
ISSN: 1535-4989
CID: 4958642

Matrix Metalloproteinase Driven Tissue Destruction In Human Tuberculosis Is Mediated By Th-17 Cytokines And The Pi3k/p110a/p70s6k Cascade [Meeting Abstract]

Singh, S.; Saraiva, L.; Singh, U.; Elkington, P.; Friedland, J.
ISI:000400372502225
ISSN: 1073-449x
CID: 5069042

Oxazolidinone Therapy for Recalcitrant Pulmonary Nontuberculous Mycobacterial Infection [Meeting Abstract]

Luoma, Kelsey; Singh, Shivani; Addrizzo-Harris, Doreen
ISI:000418374000127
ISSN: 0012-3692
CID: 5069032