Previous Article | Next Article 
Infection and Immunity, December 2003, p. 7099-7108, Vol. 71, No. 12
0019-9567/03/$08.00+0 DOI: 10.1128/IAI.71.12.7099-7108.2003
Copyright © 2003, American
Society for
Microbiology. All Rights Reserved.
Mycobacterium tuberculosis Growth at the Cavity Surface: a Microenvironment with Failed Immunity
Gilla Kaplan,1* Frank A. Post,2,
Andre L. Moreira,3 Helen Wainwright,4 Barry N. Kreiswirth,5 Melike Tanverdi,6 Barun Mathema,5 Srinivas V. Ramaswamy,7 Gabi Walther,8 Lafras M. Steyn,4 Clifton E. Barry III,9 and Linda-Gail Bekker2
Laboratory
of Mycobacterial Immunity and Pathogenesis,1
Public Health
Research Institute Tuberculosis Center, Newark,
New Jersey,5
Infectious Diseases
Unit,2
Departments of Thoracic
Surgery,8
Clinical Laboratory
Sciences, University of Cape Town, Cape Town,
South Africa,4
Department of Pathology,
Baylor College of Medicine, Houston,
Texas,7
Cerrahpasa Tip Fakultesi,
Istanbul University, Istanbul, Turkey,6
Department of
Pathology, New York University School of Medicine, New York, New
York,3
Tuberculosis
Research Section, National Institute of Allergy and Infectious
Diseases, National Institutes of Health, Rockville,
Maryland9
Received 18 June 2003/
Returned for modification 16 August 2003/
Accepted 2 September 2003
 |
ABSTRACT
|
|---|
Protective
immunity against pulmonary tuberculosis (TB) is characterized by the
formation in the lungs of granulomas consisting of macrophages and
activated T cells producing tumor necrosis factor alpha and gamma
interferon, both required for the activation of the phagocytes. In
90% of immunocompetent humans, this response controls the
infection. To understand why immunity fails in the other 10%, we
studied the lungs of six patients who underwent surgery for incurable
TB. Histologic examination of different lung lesions revealed
heterogeneous morphology and distribution of acid-fast bacilli; only at
the surface of cavities, i.e., in granulomas with a patent connection
to the airways, were there numerous bacilli. The mutation profile of
the isolates suggested that a single founder strain of
Mycobacterium tuberculosis may undergo genetic changes during
treatment, leading to acquisition of additional drug resistance
independently in discrete physical locales. Additional drug resistance
was preferentially observed at the cavity surface. Cytokine gene
expression revealed that failure to control the bacilli was not
associated with a generalized suppression of cellular immunity, since
cytokine mRNA was up regulated in all lesions tested. Rather, a
selective absence of CD4+ and
CD8+ T cells was noted at the luminal surface of the
cavity, preventing direct T-cell-macrophage interactions at
this site, probably allowing luminal phagocytes to remain permissive
for bacillary growth. In contrast, in the perinecrotic zone of the
granulomas, the two cell types colocalized and bacillary numbers were
substantially lower, suggesting that in this microenvironment an
efficient bacteriostatic or bactericidal phagocyte population was
generated.
 |
INTRODUCTION
|
|---|
Mycobacterium tuberculosis is an extremely successful
pathogen, spreading from individual to individual via the
aerosolization of infectious nucleus droplets. The infectious particles
are released from the lungs of patients with cavitary pulmonary disease
through coughing. Once inhaled and phagocytosed by resident alveolar
macrophages, the tubercle bacilli elicit the production of soluble
effector molecules, including the cytokines tumor necrosis factor alpha
and interleukin 12 (IL-12) and a large number of chemokines
(14,
17,
26). These molecules
regulate the development of the host cellular immune response that
presumably controls the infection in the majority (90%) of
immunocompetent individuals
(3). Protective immunity
is characterized by the formation of granulomas at the site of
infection. The granulomas consist primarily of activated M.
tuberculosis-infected macrophages and T cells. In the mouse model
of M. tuberculosis infection, the maturation and maintenance
of granulomas and the control of bacillary replication within
macrophages is dependent upon the continued production of tumor
necrosis factor alpha and gamma interferon (IFN-
) by
macrophages and activated T cells, respectively
(2,
8,
12,
13), and the expression
of inducible nitric oxide synthase (iNOS) in infected macrophages
(5,
16). In mice,
CD4+ T lymphocytes are the principal mediators of
resistance to tuberculosis (TB); CD8+ T lymphocytes
have been shown to contribute to this resistance
(22). An important role
for CD4+ T cells in protecting the human host from
TB is underscored by the marked susceptibility to TB in patients with
advanced human immunodeficiency virus-induced
CD4+-T-cell depletion
(9,
11,
28). In addition to
cytokine production, human CD4+ and
CD8+ T cells may directly induce the death of M.
tuberculosis-infected macrophages, resulting in reduced viability
of the bacilli (10,
24,
30).
In 10%
of apparently immunocompetent persons, the infection is not contained
by the host immune response. Progressive bacillary replication results
in disease manifestations, tissue necrosis, and cavity formation
(19). The host immune
response directed at the infecting bacilli is believed to be the main
cause of tissue necrosis, which may result from cytokine-mediated
toxicity, as well as the release of activated proteolytic enzymes by
macrophages (6,
7,
27). Most TB patients,
however, respond to antibiotic treatment by clearance of the bacilli
from the sputum, partial reversal of the granulomatous inflammatory
process, and successful clinical cure. In patients who fail to respond
to chemotherapy, including patients with multidrug-resistant (MDR) TB,
chronic progressive disease may be observed. Pneumonectomy is sometimes
employed in these patients in an attempt to reduce the bacillary load
in the lungs, to achieve sputum conversion, and/or to reduce spread of
the infection to the remaining healthy lung. In others, surgery may be
performed to reduce the life-threatening complications of TB, such as
severe hemoptysis (4,
32).
To better
understand the etiology of progressive chronic TB, we studied the lungs
of six patients who underwent surgery for incurable TB and/or
complications related to their TB. The excised lung tissue from these
patients provided a unique opportunity to study the pathogenic process
that occurs during long-term antibiotic therapy and disease
progression. By studying the histology, immunohistology, and host
cellular immune response and by characterizing the bacterial
populations present, we hoped to gain insight into the dynamics of the
infectious process.
 |
MATERIALS AND
METHODS
|
|---|
Patients.
Six patients who underwent
pneumonectomy for TB at Groote Schuur Hospital, Cape Town, South
Africa, between January 2000 and December 2001 were studied. All
subjects had been referred for the surgical management of
treatment-refractory TB (n = 3) or the complications
of post-TB lung disease (n = 3). All were residents of
the Western Cape province of South Africa and had received TB treatment
supervised by their local clinics or hospitals. Preoperative M.
tuberculosis cultures from the diagnostic sputa and chest
radiographs were performed on all subjects. The studies were approved
by the institutional review boards of Rockefeller
University and of the University of Medicine and Dentistry of New
Jersey and by the ethics committee of the University of Cape
Town.
Processing of lung
tissues.
The resected lungs
were immediately transferred to the biological safety level 3 facility
for pathological dissection. TB lesions were identified
macroscopically;
0.5 g of tissue from each lesion was snap
frozen in liquid nitrogen for mRNA analysis; another 0.5 g
from each lesion was homogenized and subjected to prolonged culture (up
to 1 year) in mycobacterial growth medium (MGIT; Becton Dickinson,
Sparks, Md.) and on Lowenstein-Jensen slants. The remainder of the lung
was immersed in formalin and prepared for microscopic analysis of the
selected lesions.
Tissue sections (2 µm thick) were
stained with hematoxylin and eosin or with carbolfuchsin
(Ziehl-Neelsen) to visualize acid-fast bacilli (AFB). The number of
mycobacteria in each area of the section was quantified, using a
40x objective, as none, scanty (individual bacilli found in
each granuloma), moderate (1 to 10 bacilli in each granuloma), or
numerous (>10 bacilli in clumps found in each field examined).
For immunohistology, additional sections were collected on charged
glass slides (Superfrost/Plus; Fisher Scientific, Pittsburgh, Pa.),
deparaffinized, rehydrated in alcohol. and submitted to antigen
retrieval by being boiled in 0.1 M citrate buffer, pH 7.0 (CD3, CD8,
CD68, or TIA-1), or in 0.1 M EDTA buffer, pH 7.0 (CD4), for 20 min
using a microwave oven. The phenotypes of the cellular infiltrates in
the tissue sections were determined by using monoclonal antibodies
against a pan-T-cell marker, CD3 (Ventana, Tucson, Ariz.), at a
dilution of 1:100; against the T-cell subsets CD4 (Nova Castra, New
Castle upon Tyne, United Kingdom) at a dilution of 1:20 and CD8 (Dako,
Carpinteria, Calif.) at a dilution of 1:20; and against the cytotoxic
cell marker TIA-1 (Coulter Inc., Hialeah, Fla.) at a dilution of 1:300.
KP1 (CD68) antibody (Dako) was used as a marker of histiocytes and
macrophages (dilution, 1:500). Reactions were carried out in an
automated immunostainer (Ventana) using an
immunoperoxidase-diaminobenzidene kit (Ventana)
(29).
Real-time
quantitative PCR (TaqMan).
To evaluate the expression level of
the IL-2, IL-12, IFN-
, and iNOS genes in the lung lesions,
quantitative reverse transcription (RT)-PCR was performed with
real-time TaqMan technology (Sequence Detection System model 7700;
Perkin-Elmer, Wellesley, Mass.). Gene-specific primers and
6-carboxy-fluorescein probes were designed using Primer Express
software and synthesized by Perkin-Elmer. RT-PCR was carried out with
the TaqMan RT-PCR core Reagents kit (PE Applied Biosystems, Foster
City, Calif.). Briefly, 5 ng of RNA extracted from the lung tissues was
reverse transcribed and amplified in TaqMan EZ buffer containing 300
µmol each of dATP, dCTP, and dGTP/liter, 600
µmol of dUTP/liter, 3 mmol of manganese acetate/liter, 0.1 U of
DNA polymerase/µl, 0.01 U of AmpErase uracil
N-glycosylase/µl, 200 nmol of each primer/liter, and
100 nmol of each detection probe/liter. The thermal-cycling conditions
were as follows: 2 min at 50°C (initial step), 30 min at
60°C (RT), 5 min at 95°C (deactivation of uracil
N-glycosylase), 40 cycles of 15 s at 95°C
(denaturation), and 1 min at 60°C (annealing and extension).
Sequence-specific amplification was detected as 6-carboxy-fluorescein
fluorescence exceeding the threshold limit (10 times the standard
deviation of the baseline) during the amplification cycle.
Gene-specific mRNA was quantified using standard curves established
from PCR amplifications of serial dilutions of known mRNA levels.
Samples were assayed at 10 to 3.2 ng per reaction per well.
Amplification of the gene for human acidic ribosomal protein was
performed on all samples tested to control for variability in the
amount of RNA. The quantity of cDNA for each experimental gene was
normalized to the amount of human acidic ribosomal protein in each
sample. Levels of gene-specific messages were graphed as normalized
message units as determined from the standard curve. A no-template
control was included in each amplification reaction to control for
contaminating templates. For valid sample analysis, the fluorescence
intensity in the no-template control was required to be
zero.
RFLP analysis and gene
sequencing.
Restriction
fragment length polymorphism (RFLP) analysis of M.
tuberculosis isolated from sputa, as well as various lung lesions,
was performed as described previously
(31). Briefly, M.
tuberculosis was harvested from Lowenstein-Jensen slants, and DNA
was extracted and digested with PvuII restriction
endonuclease. DNA fragments were separated by agarose gel
electrophoresis, transferred by Southern blotting, and hybridized with
labeled IS6110 probe. Bands were visualized by enhanced
chemiluminescence and analyzed with Whole Band Analyzer software,
version 3.4 (BioImage; RM Luton, Inc., Jackson, Miss.).
Direct DNA sequencing of rpoB, katG, inhA
(mabA), pncA, embB, rpsL,
rrs, and gyrA was performed on all isolates as
described previously
(25).
 |
RESULTS
|
|---|
Patients.
Six patients who underwent pulmonary
resection for complications arising from TB were studied. All six
patients had unilateral lung disease, all with (almost)
complete destruction of the affected lung (Fig.
1). Three patients (two of whom had MDR TB) underwent surgery for chronic
sputum-positive TB despite 18 to 24 months of supervised multidrug
therapy (Table
1). The other three patients, who were culture negative at the time of
sputum sampling, all had histories of pulmonary TB. These patients had
presented with hemoptysis and other symptoms suggestive of relapse and
had received empirical treatment for TB for 7 to 15 months. Lung
resection in these patients was performed to relieve ongoing hemoptysis
thought to have arisen from a focus in the destroyed lung. Sputum
cultures from these three patients at the time of presentation,
however, failed to yield M. tuberculosis (Table
1). All patients received
TB therapy up to the time of surgery, and none of the patients were
coinfected with human immunodeficiency
virus.

View larger version (68K):
[in this window]
[in a new window]
|
FIG. 1. Radiogram
of the lungs of patient 2 before surgery (A) and the resected
lung at the time of sample collection (B). The right lung
is almost fully destroyed. It contains areas with cavitations,
fibrosis, nodules, and granulomas with central
necrosis.
|
|
Presence of mycobacteria in lesions
obtained from the resected lungs.
The lungs of all six patients revealed
evidence of TB. The various areas of the lungs examined contained
diverse lesions with differing extents of pathology, including
cavitating granulomas, fibrosis, smaller nodules, closed necrotic
noncavitating granulomas, and bronchiectasis. Macroscopic caseation
(Fig. 1) was observed only
in patients with active TB (patients 1 to 3 [Table
1]). Dissection of
the lungs allowed us to identify and sample a number of macroscopically
distinct lesions (two to six per patient) and, in some cases, lung
tissue which appeared uninvolved (Table
2). Each lesion was examined microscopically, characterized histologically,
assigned a semiquantitative enumeration for the abundance of AFB, and
categorized according to its continuity with the airways. AFB were
almost exclusively observed in the lesions of patients with
sputum-positive disease. M. tuberculosis was cultured from all
lesions of sputum-positive patients. Bacilli were not cultured from any
of the lesions of the sputum-negative subjects, including those with
scanty AFB.
Genetic analysis of M.
tuberculosis cultures obtained from lesions of resected
lungs.
Genetic analysis was
carried out on all isolates cultured from preoperative sputum samples
and lung lesions. IS6110-based RFLP analysis revealed a
homogeneous bacterial population and no evidence of mixed infection in
each of the three patients with active disease (Fig.
2). In contrast, sequence analyses of several genes implicated in drug
resistance revealed heterogeneity in the resistance-associated alleles
among the isolates recovered from different lung lesions of the same
patient (Table 2). For
example, the isolate cultured from the upper-lobe cavity of patient 1
contained the AAG
AGG K43R resistance mutation in the genetic
target of streptomycin (rpsL), whereas the wild-type gene was
present in the isolate obtained from sputum, as well as a closed
lower-lobe granuloma (Table
2). Moreover, in the lung
from patient 2, two mutations in the fluoroquinolone
resistance-associated gene gyrA, GAC
AAC and
GAC
GGC (D89N and D94G, respectively), were found in all three
isolates obtained from open lesions, whereas the bacilli from the
sputum and the two closed lesions bore the wild-type gyrA
allele. Most strikingly, patient 3 had three discrete bacillary
populations identified, with different alleles of the
resistance-associated genes. Apparently normal lung tissue from this
patient contained few M. tuberculosis cells, and these bore
the wild-type alleles in the katG (a target for INH),
embB (a target for EMB), and rrs (a target for
aminoglycosides) genes. Bacteria isolated from the sputum of patient 3
and from four pathological sites in the lung had identical
katG (S315T) and embB (M306V) mutations but were wild
type for rrs. A sixth site contained bacilli that, in addition
to the katG and embB mutations, had acquired a
resistance mutation (G1484T) in the rrs gene. The mutation
profiles of these isolates suggest that the acquisition of drug
resistance is a dynamic process whereby an initial infecting strain may
spread from one pulmonary site to another, becoming the founder for
acquisition of additional antibiotic resistance at secondary sites.
Interestingly, in all three patients, the additionally acquired drug
resistance mutations were seen in M. tuberculosis cultured
from open lesions, i.e., lesions connected to an airway where the
bacilli were numerous (Table
2).

View larger version (58K):
[in this window]
[in a new window]
|
FIG. 2. IS6110
Southern blot hybridization patterns of M. tuberculosis
isolates recovered from multiple anatomical sites in the lungs of
patients 2 and 3. The six isolates from patient 2 were recovered from
sputum (lane 1), right upper lobe open (RUL-O) (lane 2), right lower
lobe open (RLL-O) (lane 3), right lower lobe open (lane 4), right
middle lobe closed (RML-C) (lane 5), and right lower lobe closed
(RLL-C) (lane 6). The seven isolates from patient 3 were recovered from
sputum (lane 1), left upper lobe open (LUL-O) (lane 2), left lower lobe
open (LLL-O) (lane 3), left lower lobe open (lane 4), left upper lobe
closed (LUL-C) (lane 5), left lower lobe closed (LLL-C) (lane 6), and
left lower lobe normal (LLL-"Normal") (lane 7) (Table
2). Lane STD, molecular
weight
standard.
|
|
Cytokine
and iNOS gene expression in lesions of resected lungs.
The different lung samples obtained
from all six patients were evaluated for expression of mRNA for IL-2,
IL-12, IFN-
, and iNOS. Cytokine and iNOS gene expression was
observed in all lesions from patients with active TB, as well as from
those who had post-tuberculous, culture-negative lung disease (Table
2). No apparent
correlation of the levels of expression of the different genes with the
type of lesion or the presence of AFB was observed. Rather, our results
showed variable levels of immune activation in the tissue samples
obtained from the different types of lesions of all subjects studied.
This heterogeneity of cytokine expression suggests that the relatively
large tissue fragments collected for study (
0.5 g each)
contained a mixture of microenvironments rather than a single specific
histologic microenvironment (see below). Our results also suggested
that failure to control the growth of the bacilli was not associated
with a global suppression of cellular immunity in the lungs of the
three patients with chronic sputum-positive disease. However, the
absolute levels of immune activation in the lungs of these patients
could not be determined, since we did not know the baseline level of
immune activation that would be induced in the lungs of normal or
infected individuals who do not develop active
disease.
Histopathologic analysis of
lesions of resected lungs.
Examination of histopathology sections
of the various lesions revealed heterogeneous cellular architecture,
most prominent in the layered cavitating and noncavitating granulomas
seen in the lungs of patients with sputum-positive disease.
Cross-sections of these lesions (examined from the inside of the cavity
luman outward) revealed striking cellular accumulation at the luminal
surface of the cavity consisting of numerous mononuclear cells
essentially surrounded by a layer of acellular caseous necrotic
material (Fig. 3A, B, and
C). Subtending the acellular necrotic layer there was
granulomatous-fibrotic tissue with a mixed mononuclear-cell infiltrate
consisting of Langhans-type giant cells, sheets of epithelioid
macrophages, and many scattered lymphocytes (Fig.
3E and F).

View larger version (102K):
[in this window]
[in a new window]
|
FIG. 3. Localization
of macrophages and AFB in resected lungs. Macrophages, stained with
CD68 (A, C, and E) and AFB stained with carbolfuchsin (B, D, and F) in
the left upper-lobe cavity wall of the open lesion of patient 1 are
shown. CD68 staining is seen at the cavity (cav) surface (A and C),
within the necrotic area (nec) (A and C), and in the granulomatous area
below the necrotic area (E). AFB are seen predominantly within
macrophages at the cavity surface (D) and not in the Langhans
cells or macrophages of the granulomatous tissue (F). The inset in
panel D shows AFB in cells at the luminal surface of the
right-lower-lobe cavity of patient 2. AFB are also seen in macrophages
within the liquefied (liq) material adjacent to the necrotic area
(H) of the left-lower-lobe fibrotic nodule undergoing
breakdown (liquefaction) in patient 3. Magnifications,
x10 (A and B), x40 (C, E, F, and G), x80 (D,
inset), and x200 (D and
H).
|
|
Bacilli,
apparently cell associated, were detected in large numbers at the
cavity surface (Fig. 3D).
The area of acellular necrotic material had few, if any, visible AFB.
The granulomatous-fibrotic layer, with abundant macrophages and giant
cells, was essentially devoid of visible AFB (Fig.
3F). In addition, no AFB
were seen in alveolar macrophages residing within airspaces of the
residual functional lung (not shown). In closed (noncavitary)
necrotizing granulomas, small to moderate numbers of AFB were observed
in macrophages infiltrating the necrotic areas, most prominently where
breakdown was occurring (Fig. 3G and
H). Thus, in the three patients with sputum-positive
disease, AFB were most numerous at the luminal surfaces of the
cavities, i.e., in granulomas with a patent connection to the
airways.
In comparison, in the patients who were sputum negative,
the surfaces of the cavities appeared inactive, with reepithelization
over fibrotic tissue (not shown). Multiple mononuclear cells, including
multinucleated giant cells, epithelioid macrophages, and lymphocytes,
were seen in the granulomatous-fibrotic tissue, despite the absence of
any visible AFB and the failure to grow bacilli from this tissue. The
extensive cellular immune response may explain the high levels of
expression of iNOS and cytokine genes in these lesions, suggesting the
persistence of antigen in the absence of intact visible and/or
culturable AFB (Table
2).
Immunohistologic
localization of macrophages and T lymphocytes.
Immunohistologic examination of lung
sections revealed that CD68+ macrophages were most
abundant in two areas of the cavitating granulomas: (i) at the luminal
surface of the cavity and (ii) at the other side of the acellular
necrotic area in the granulomatous-fibrotic zone (Fig.
3A and
E). The necrotic area
was itself diffusely stained CD68+, suggesting that
remnants of necrotic macrophages still expressed residual antigen. In
addition, scattered CD68+ macrophages were seen
among the fibroblasts of fibrotic areas, and large numbers of alveolar
macrophages were seen within the airspaces (not shown). Contrary to
dogma that assumes that at the cavity surface bacilli grow in the
extracellular necrotic matter, we observed cells with macrophage
morphology (that stained CD68+ in serial sections)
that appeared to be infected with multiple bacilli (Fig.
3D and inset). Staining
for the presence of CD3+ CD4+ and
CD3+ CD8+ T lymphocytes revealed
an abundance of these cells within the granulomatous-fibrotic layer and
in lymphoid aggregates of the granuloma (Fig.
4A, C, E, and G).
Scattered T lymphocytes were seen within the fibrotic areas and in the
airspaces (not shown). In contrast, a striking absence of
CD3+, CD4+, and
CD8+ T cells was noted in the acellular necrotic
zone, as well as at the luminal surface of the cavity (Fig.
4A and E). This area, however, contained large numbers of
CD3-, CD4-,
CD8- mononuclear cells with lymphoid morphology that
stained for the presence of cytotoxic granules (TIA+
cells) (Fig. 4D and H). Taken together, these results suggest that the luminal surface of the
cavity represents a microenvironment within the lung in which
macrophages and T cells are not colocalized, thereby preventing direct
T-cell-macrophage interactions at those sites. In contrast,
only millimeters away, at the other side of the necrotic zone (Fig.
4D), another
microenvironment exists in which the two cell types are colocalized and
free to interact directly, resulting in an efficient immune response
capable of inhibiting mycobacterial
replication.

View larger version (119K):
[in this window]
[in a new window]
|
FIG. 4. Localization
of lymphoid cells in lesions of resected lungs. CD4+
(A, B, and C) and CD8+ (E, F, and G) T cells are
seen in the granulomatous-fibrotic areas of the lung (arrows) but not
in the necrotic (nec) zone or at the cavity (cav) surface.
CD4- CD8- cytotoxic cells
(TIA-1+) are seen at the cavity surface but not in
the necrotic zone (D) and are less frequent in the
granulomatous area (*). These cells contain cytotoxic granules that
stain TIA-1+ (H, inset). Magnifications, x4
(A, D, and E), x40 (B, C, F, G, and H), and x100 (H,
inset).
|
|
 |
DISCUSSION
|
|---|
In this paper,
we present data supporting the idea that in the lungs of patients
affected by TB, a single founder strain of M. tuberculosis may
undergo mutagenesis during treatment, leading to the acquisition of
drug resistance independently in discrete physical locales, resulting
in parallel evolution of heterogeneous subpopulations of
drug-resistant bacilli. We also show that the lung of a chronic TB
patient contains a diversity of microanatomical niches created by the
different immunological processes occurring independently at these
sites. Such anatomical and immunological variability appears to be
associated with discrete genetic (mutated) subpopulations of bacilli.
We observe that the acquisition of new drug resistance mutations is
preferentially localized to the microenvironment where bacillary growth
seems most active, in macrophages residing at the luminal surfaces of
the cavities. At these sites, the macrophages probably remain
inactivated and thus permissive for bacillary growth. The observation
that the bacilli are growing inside macrophages at the cavity surface
is contrary to common dogma, which presumes that bacillary replication
at this site is extracellular.
Lack of macrophage activation to a
bacteriostatic state may be due to the selective exclusion of
CD3+ CD4+ and
CD3+ CD8+ T cells from the lumen
of the cavity (Fig. 4).
The underlying mechanism for the exclusion of CD3+ T
cells from the cavity surface is unknown. Interestingly, this exclusion
appears to be selective: there is a relative enrichment at this site
for CD68+ macrophages, as well as a population of as
yet undefined TIA-1+ cytotoxic lymphoid cells. The
anti-TIA-1 is a monoclonal antibody that recognizes the 17-kDa granule
membrane protein (GMP-17) expressed predominantly in the granules of
CD8+
ß T-cell receptor (TCR)
natural killer (NK) cells, as well as 
TCR+ cells and some CD4+
ß TCR+ cells
(1,
18,
20). Although the role of
GMP-17 remains obscure, the protein is known to translocate to the
cytotoxic-T-cell surface after fusion of the granules with the cell
membrane and to have sequence homology with calcium channel proteins
(20).
TIA-1+ cells have been shown to kill target cells by
two distinct mechanisms, Fas receptor-mediated apoptosis and granule
exocytosis (15,
21,
23). However, in the
present study, there was no direct evidence of any cytotoxic activity
of these cells, nor do the cells appear to activate the adjacent
macrophages to a bacteriostatic-bactericidal phenotype. As expected, in
the necrotic layer between the luminal surface of the cavity and the
perinecrotic granulomatous-fibrotic zone, CD68+
macrophages and TIA-1+ cytotoxic cells, as well as
CD3+ CD4+ and
CD3+ CD8+ T cells, are not seen.
In contrast, where macrophages and T cells are colocalized and
potentially in close contact with each other, as observed in the
granulomatous-fibrotic areas, the macrophages are morphologically
activated (multinucleated giant cells or epithelioid) and few if any
bacilli are present. The phenotypic and functional (cytokine response)
identification of the TIA-1+ leukocytes seen at the
surfaces of the cavities in patients with active TB must await the
immunohistologic probing of unfixed frozen tissue that can be performed
only in a specially equipped biological safety level 3
facility.
The growth of M. tuberculosis is well known to
occur in proportion to oxygen tension
(33). Thus, another
factor contributing to the florid bacterial growth seen at the luminal
surface of the cavity could be improved access to oxygen in this
microenvironment. The extent of bacterial growth appears to follow an
intuitive pattern with respect to oxygen concentration; the necrotic
and deeper fibrotic regions are anticipated to be largely anoxic and
therefore free of visible AFB and almost sterile. However, our
inability to visualize the AFB does not exclude the possibility that a
few viable nonreplicating bacilli remain within the macrophages in
these sites. If and when breakdown and liquefaction occur at these
sites, the bacilli may start growing and become more numerous, as seen
in Fig. 3G and H. The extent to which oxygen concentration and immune
pressure combine to suppress bacterial growth at sites distal from the
cavity lumen remains to be determined.
The presence of discrete
populations of bacteria in patients in which they are presumed to have
acquired drug resistance during therapy has not been carefully studied.
Our results suggest that relying on drug susceptibility tests of
organisms isolated from patient sputa may not provide an accurate
representation of the bacterial susceptibility in all subpopulations
within the lung. An examination of the levels of resistance (MICs of
drugs) of the bacilli isolated from different sites in the lung would
provide useful information for directing therapeutic options. Because
quantification of the bacterial subpopulations and their absolute
resistance levels was not performed in this study, it is not possible
for us to make specific therapeutic recommendations. However, our
observations suggest the possibility that a careful analysis of
resistance levels and bacillary population size might lead to a
recommendation in some cases to continue therapy with a first-line or
even a second-line drug in the face of resistance to a given drug in
the sputum isolate.
These studies provide a preliminary analysis
of the immunological and bacterial attributes in the lungs of human
patients during the dynamic process of tuberculous-lesion evolution.
Continued study of lung tissues from patients with active TB will
provide important benchmarks for validation of animal models of disease
and may suggest alternative therapeutic strategies for the treatment of
chronic and MDR TB.
 |
ACKNOWLEDGMENTS
|
|---|
We thank Liana Tsenova for
help with the micrographs and Sabrina Dalton for help in preparing the
manuscript.
These studies were supported in part by the Fogarty
grant AITRP W00231 (to Frank A. Post and Linda-Gail Bekker) and NIH
grants AI 22616 and AI 54338 (to Gilla Kaplan). Funding was also
provided by DACST, South
Africa.
 |
FOOTNOTES
|
|---|
* Corresponding
author. Mailing address: Public Health Research Institute, 225 Warren
St., Newark, NJ 07103-3535. Phone: (973) 854-3220. Fax: (973) 854-3222.
E-mail:
kaplan{at}phri.org. 
Editor:
W. A. Petri, Jr.
Present
address: Department of Internal Medicine, UMC St. Radboud, 6500 HB
Nijmegen, The Netherlands. 
 |
REFERENCES
|
|---|
| 1. | Anderson,
P., C. Nagler-Anderson, C. O'Brien, H. Levine, S. Watkins,
H. S. Slayter, M. L. Blue, and S. F.
Schlossman. 1990. A monoclonal antibody reactive with
a 15-kDa cytoplasmic granule-associated protein defines a subpopulation
of CD8+ T lymphocytes. J. Immunol.
144:574-582.[Abstract] |
| 2. | Bean,
A. G., D. R. Roach, H. Briscoe, M. P.
France, H. Korner, J. D. Sedgwick, and W. J.
Britton. 1999. Structural deficiencies in granuloma
formation in TNF gene-targeted mice underlie the heightened
susceptibility to aerosol Mycobacterium tuberculosis
infection, which is not compensated for by lymphotoxin.J. Immunol.
162:3504-3511.[Abstract/Free Full Text] |
| 3. | Bloom,
B. R., and C. J. Murray. 1992.
Tuberculosis: commentary on a reemergent killer. Science
257:1055-1064.[Abstract/Free Full Text] |
| 4. | Blumberg,
H. M., W. J. Burman, R. E. Chaisson,
C. L. Daley, S. C. Etkind, L. N.
Friedman, P. Fujiwara, M. Grzemska, P. C. Hopewell,
M. D. Iseman, R. M. Jasmer, V. Koppaka,
R. I. Menzies, R. J. O'Brien, R. R.
Reves, L. B. Reichman, P. M. Simone, J.
R. Starke, and A. A. Vernon. 2003. American
Thoracic Society/Centers for Disease Control and Prevention/Infectious
Diseases Society of America: treatment of tuberculosis.Am. J. Respir. Crit. Care Med.
167:603-662.[Free Full Text] |
| 5. | Chan,
J., Y. Xing, R. S. Magliozzo, and B. R. Bloom.1992
. Killing of virulent Mycobacterium
tuberculosis by reactive nitrogen intermediates produced by
activated murine macrophages. J. Exp Med.
175:1111-1122.[Abstract/Free Full Text] |
| 6. | Chang,
J. C., A. Wysocki, K. M. Tchou-Wong, N. Moskowitz,
Y. Zhang, and W. N. Rom. 1996. Effect of
Mycobacterium tuberculosis and its components on macrophages
and the release of matrix metalloproteinases. Thorax
51:306-311.[Abstract/Free Full Text] |
| 7. | Condos,
R., W. N. Rom, Y. M. Liu, and N. W.
Schluger. 1998. Local immune responses correlate with
presentation and outcome in tuberculosis. Am. J.
Respir. Crit. Care Med.
157:729-735.[Abstract/Free Full Text] |
| 8. | Cooper,
A. M., and J. L. Flynn. 1995. The
protective immune response to Mycobacterium tuberculosis.Curr. Opin. Immunol.
7:512-516.[CrossRef][Medline] |
| 9. | Daley,
C. L., P. M. Small, G. F. Schecter,
G. K. Schoolnik, R. A. McAdam, W. R.
Jacobs, Jr., and P. C. Hopewell. 1992. An
outbreak of tuberculosis with accelerated progression among persons
infected with the human immunodeficiency virus. An analysis using
restriction-fragment-length polymorphisms. N. Engl.
J. Med.
326:231-235.[Abstract] |
| 10. | Dieli,
F., M. Troye-Blomberg, J. Ivanyi, J. J. Fournie, M.
Bonneville, M. A. Peyrat, G. Sireci, and A. Salerno.2000
. V 9/V 2 T lymphocytes reduce the
viability of intracellular Mycobacterium tuberculosis.Eur. J. Immunol.
30:1512-1519.[CrossRef][Medline] |
| 11. | Di
Perri, G., M. Cruciani, M. C. Danzi, R. Luzzati, G. De
Checchi, M. Malena, S. Pizzighella, R. Mazzi, M. Solbiati, E. Concia,
et al. 1989. Nosocomial epidemic of active
tuberculosis among HIV-infected patients. Lancet
ii:1502-1504. |
| 12. | Flynn,
J. L., J. Chan, K. J. Triebold,
D. K. Dalton, T. A. Stewart, and B. R.
Bloom. 1993. An essential role for interferon gamma in
resistance to Mycobacterium tuberculosis infection. J.
Exp. Med.
178:2249-2254.[Abstract/Free Full Text] |
| 13. | Flynn,
J. L., M. M. Goldstein, J. Chan,
K. J. Triebold, K. Pfeffer, C. J. Lowenstein, R.
Schreiber, T. W. Mak, and B. R. Bloom.1995
. Tumor necrosis factor-alpha is required in the
protective immune response against Mycobacterium tuberculosis
in mice. Immunity
2:561-572.[CrossRef][Medline] |
| 14. | Henderson,
R. A., S. C. Watkins, and J. L.
Flynn. 1997. Activation of human dendritic cells
following infection with Mycobacterium tuberculosis.J. Immunol.
159:635-643.[Abstract] |
| 15. | Kagi,
D., F. Vignaux, B. Ledermann, K. Burki, V. Depraetere, S. Nagata, H.
Hengartner, and P. Golstein. 1994. Fas and perforin
pathways as major mechanisms of T cell-mediated cytotoxicity.Science
265:528-530.[Abstract/Free Full Text] |
| 16. | MacMicking,
J. D., R. J. North, R. LaCourse, J. S.
Mudgett, S. K. Shah, and C. F. Nathan.1997
. Identification of nitric oxide synthase as a
protective locus against tuberculosis. Proc. Natl. Acad. Sci.
USA
94:5243-5248.[Abstract/Free Full Text] |
| 17. | Manca,
C., L. Tsenova, C. E. Barry III, A. Bergtold, S. Freeman,
P. A. Haslett, J. M. Musser, V. H.
Freedman, and G. Kaplan. 1999. Mycobacterium
tuberculosis CDC1551 induces a more vigorous host response in vivo
and in vitro, but is not more virulent than other clinical isolates.J. Immunol.
162:6740-6746.[Abstract/Free Full Text] |
| 18. | Matutes,
E., E. Coelho, M. J. Aguado, R. Morilla, A. Crawford, K.
Owusu-Ankomah, and D. Catovsky. 1996. Expression of
TIA-1 and TIA-2 in T cell malignancies and T cell lymphocytosis.J. Clin. Pathol.
49:154-158.[Abstract/Free Full Text] |
| 19. | Medlar,
E. M. 1955. Necropsy studies of human
pulmonary tuberculosis. Am. Rev. Tuberc.
71:29-55. |
| 20. | Medley,
Q. G., N. Kedersha, S. O'Brien, Q. Tian, S. F.
Schlossman, M. Streuli, and P. Anderson. 1996.
Characterization of GMP-17, a granule membrane protein that moves to
the plasma membrane of natural killer cells following target cell
recognition. Proc. Natl. Acad. Sci. USA
93:685-689.[Abstract/Free Full Text] |
| 21. | Meehan,
S. M., R. T. McCluskey, M. Pascual, F. I.
Preffer, P. Anderson, S. F. Schlossman, and R. B.
Colvin. 1997. Cytotoxicity and apoptosis in human
renal allografts: identification, distribution, and quantitation of
cells with a cytotoxic granule protein GMP-17 (TIA-1) and cells with
fragmented nuclear DNA. Lab. Investig.
76:639-649.[Medline] |
| 22. | Mogues,
T., M. E. Goodrich, L. Ryan, R. LaCourse, and R. J.
North. 2001. The relative importance of T cell subsets
in immunity and immunopathology of airborne Mycobacterium
tuberculosis infection in mice. J. Exp. Med.
193:271-280.[Abstract/Free Full Text] |
| 23. | Nagata,
S., and P. Golstein. 1995. The Fas death factor.Science
267:1449-1456.[Abstract/Free Full Text] |
| 24. | Oddo,
M., T. Renno, A. Attinger, T. Bakker, H. R. MacDonald, and
P. R. Meylan. 1998. Fas ligand-induced
apoptosis of infected human macrophages reduces the viability of
intracellular Mycobacterium tuberculosis. J.
Immunol.
160:5448-5454.[Abstract/Free Full Text] |
| 25. | Ramaswamy,
S., and J. M. Musser. 1998. Molecular
genetic basis of antimicrobial agent resistance in Mycobacterium
tuberculosis: 1998 update. Tuber. Lung Dis.
79:3-29.[CrossRef][Medline] |
| 26. | Roach,
D. R., A. G. Bean, C. Demangel, M. P.
France, H. Briscoe, and W. J. Britton. 2002.
TNF regulates chemokine induction essential for cell recruitment,
granuloma formation, and clearance of mycobacterial infection.J. Immunol.
168:4620-4627.[Abstract/Free Full Text] |
| 27. | Schluger,
N. W., and W. N. Rom. 1998. The
host immune response to tuberculosis. Am. J. Respir.
Crit. Care Med.
157:679-691.[Free Full Text] |
| 28. | Selwyn,
P. A., D. Hartel, V. A. Lewis, E. E.
Schoenbaum, S. H. Vermund, R. S. Klein,
A. T. Walker, and G. H. Friedland.1989
. A prospective study of the risk of tuberculosis
among intravenous drug users with human immunodeficiency virus
infection. N. Engl. J. Med.
320:545-550.[Abstract] |
| 29. | Siddiqui,
M. R., A. L. Moreira, Y. Negesse, G. A.
Taye, W. A. Hanekom, P. A. Haslett, S. Britton, and
G. Kaplan. 2002. Local nerve damage in leprosy does
not lead to an impaired cellular immune response or decreased wound
healing in the skin. J. Infect. Dis.
186:260-265.[CrossRef][Medline] |
| 30. | Stenger,
S., R. J. Mazzaccaro, K. Uyemura, S. Cho, P. F.
Barnes, J. P. Rosat, A. Sette, M. B. Brenner,
S. A. Porcelli, B. R. Bloom, and R. L.
Modlin. 1997. Differential effects of cytolytic T cell
subsets on intracellular infection. Science
276:1684-1687.[Abstract/Free Full Text] |
| 31. | van
Embden, J. D., M. D. Cave, J. T.
Crawford, J. W. Dale, K. D. Eisenach, B. Gicquel,
P. Hermans, C. Martin, R. McAdam, T. M. Shinnick, et al.1993
. Strain identification of Mycobacterium
tuberculosis by DNA fingerprinting: recommendations for a
standardized methodology. J. Clin. Microbiol.
31:406-409.[Abstract/Free Full Text] |
| 32. | van
Leuven, M., M. De Groot, K. P. Shean, U. O. von
Oppell, and P. A. Willcox. 1997. Pulmonary
resection as an adjunct in the treatment of multiple drug-resistant
tuberculosis. Ann. Thorac. Surg.
63:1368-1373.[Abstract/Free Full Text] |
| 33. | Wayne,
L. G. 1977. Synchronized replication of
Mycobacterium tuberculosis. Infect. Immun.
17:528-530.[Abstract/Free Full Text] |
Infection and Immunity, December 2003, p. 7099-7108, Vol. 71, No. 12
0019-9567/03/$08.00+0 DOI: 10.1128/IAI.71.12.7099-7108.2003
Copyright © 2003, American
Society for
Microbiology. All Rights Reserved.
This article has been cited by other articles:
-
Via, L. E., Lin, P. L., Ray, S. M., Carrillo, J., Allen, S. S., Eum, S. Y., Taylor, K., Klein, E., Manjunatha, U., Gonzales, J., Lee, E. G., Park, S. K., Raleigh, J. A., Cho, S. N., McMurray, D. N., Flynn, J. L., Barry, C. E. III
(2008). Tuberculous Granulomas Are Hypoxic in Guinea Pigs, Rabbits, and Nonhuman Primates. Infect. Immun.
76: 2333-2340
[Abstract]
[Full Text]
-
Chakravarty, S. D., Zhu, G., Tsai, M. C., Mohan, V. P., Marino, S., Kirschner, D. E., Huang, L., Flynn, J., Chan, J.
(2008). Tumor Necrosis Factor Blockade in Chronic Murine Tuberculosis Enhances Granulomatous Inflammation and Disorganizes Granulomas in the Lungs. Infect. Immun.
76: 916-926
[Abstract]
[Full Text]
-
Elkington, P. T., Green, J. A., Emerson, J. E., Lopez-Pascua, L. D., Boyle, J. J., O'Kane, C. M., Friedland, J. S.
(2007). Synergistic Up-Regulation of Epithelial Cell Matrix Metalloproteinase-9 Secretion in Tuberculosis. Am. J. Respir. Cell Mol. Bio.
37: 431-437
[Abstract]
[Full Text]
-
Danaviah, S., Govender, S., Gordon, M. L., Cassol, S.
(2007). Atypical mycobacterial spondylitis in HIV-negative patients identified by genotyping. J Bone Joint Surg Br
89-B: 346-348
[Abstract]
[Full Text]
-
Chakravarty, S. D., Xu, J., Lu, B., Gerard, C., Flynn, J., Chan, J.
(2007). The Chemokine Receptor CXCR3 Attenuates the Control of Chronic Mycobacterium tuberculosis Infection in BALB/c Mice. J. Immunol.
178: 1723-1735
[Abstract]
[Full Text]
-
Mathema, B., Kurepina, N. E., Bifani, P. J., Kreiswirth, B. N.
(2006). Molecular Epidemiology of Tuberculosis: Current Insights. Clin. Microbiol. Rev.
19: 658-685
[Abstract]
[Full Text]
-
Warner, D. F., Mizrahi, V.
(2006). Tuberculosis Chemotherapy: the Influence of Bacillary Stress and Damage Response Pathways on Drug Efficacy. Clin. Microbiol. Rev.
19: 558-570
[Abstract]
[Full Text]
-
Elkington, P T G, Friedland, J S
(2006). Matrix metalloproteinases in destructive pulmonary pathology. Thorax
61: 259-266
[Abstract]
[Full Text]
-
Park, J. S., Tamayo, M. H., Gonzalez-Juarrero, M., Orme, I. M., Ordway, D. J.
(2006). Virulent clinical isolates of Mycobacterium tuberculosis grow rapidly and induce cellular necrosis but minimal apoptosis in murine macrophages. J. Leukoc. Biol.
79: 80-86
[Abstract]
[Full Text]
-
Elkington, P. T. G., Nuttall, R. K., Boyle, J. J., O'Kane, C. M., Horncastle, D. E., Edwards, D. R., Friedland, J. S.
(2005). Mycobacterium tuberculosis, but Not Vaccine BCG, Specifically Upregulates Matrix Metalloproteinase-1. Am. J. Respir. Crit. Care Med.
172: 1596-1604
[Abstract]
[Full Text]
-
Garcia de Viedma, D., Alonso Rodriguez, N., Andres, S., Ruiz Serrano, M. J., Bouza, E.
(2005). Characterization of Clonal Complexity in Tuberculosis by Mycobacterial Interspersed Repetitive Unit-Variable-Number Tandem Repeat Typing. J. Clin. Microbiol.
43: 5660-5664
[Abstract]
[Full Text]
-
Elkington, P. T. G., Emerson, J. E., Lopez-Pascua, L. D. C., O'Kane, C. M., Horncastle, D. E., Boyle, J. J., Friedland, J. S.
(2005). Mycobacterium tuberculosis Up-Regulates Matrix Metalloproteinase-1 Secretion from Human Airway Epithelial Cells via a p38 MAPK Switch. J. Immunol.
175: 5333-5340
[Abstract]
[Full Text]
-
Meacci, F., Orru, G., Iona, E., Giannoni, F., Piersimoni, C., Pozzi, G., Fattorini, L., Oggioni, M. R.
(2005). Drug Resistance Evolution of a Mycobacterium tuberculosis Strain from a Noncompliant Patient. J. Clin. Microbiol.
43: 3114-3120
[Abstract]
[Full Text]
-
McCammon, M. T., Gillette, J. S., Thomas, D. P., Ramaswamy, S. V., Graviss, E. A., Kreiswirth, B. N., Vijg, J., Quitugua, T. N.
(2005). Detection of rpoB Mutations Associated with Rifampin Resistance in Mycobacterium tuberculosis Using Denaturing Gradient Gel Electrophoresis. Antimicrob. Agents Chemother.
49: 2200-2209
[Abstract]
[Full Text]
-
Long, R., Jones, R., Talbot, J., Mayers, I., Barrie, J., Hoskinson, M., Light, B.
(2005). Inhaled Nitric Oxide Treatment of Patients with Pulmonary Tuberculosis Evidenced by Positive Sputum Smears. Antimicrob. Agents Chemother.
49: 1209-1212
[Abstract]
[Full Text]
-
Munoz-Elias, E. J., Timm, J., Botha, T., Chan, W.-T., Gomez, J. E., McKinney, J. D.
(2005). Replication Dynamics of Mycobacterium tuberculosis in Chronically Infected Mice. Infect. Immun.
73: 546-551
[Abstract]
[Full Text]
-
Karakousis, P. C., Yoshimatsu, T., Lamichhane, G., Woolwine, S. C., Nuermberger, E. L., Grosset, J., Bishai, W. R.
(2004). Dormancy Phenotype Displayed by Extracellular Mycobacterium tuberculosis within Artificial Granulomas in Mice. JEM
200: 647-657
[Abstract]
[Full Text]