
New Study Pinpoints Why TB is So Dangerous for People with HIV
Researchers from Sweden’s Linköping University discover the pathway that leads to deadly infections in people co-infected with HIV and TB.
As tuberculosis (TB) continues to be one of the top 10 leading causes of death around the world, people
The World Health Organization’s (WHO) recent release of the
According to
"The risk of infection progressing to active tuberculosis is around 30 times higher for people who are HIV-positive. But the reason for this has not been known at the cellular level," said study leader and Senior Lecturer at Sweden’s Linköping University Robert Blomgran in a recent
People who carry Mycobacterium tuberculosis bacteria in their bodies without ever developing illness symptoms have what is called
To understand why, the study authors looked at dendritic cells, which are antigen-presenting cells that play an important role in immune response. In cases of latent TB, people exposed to the Mycobacterium tuberculosis bacteria are protected by an immune response that surrounds the bacteria in scar tissue. In healthy people, dendritic cells break down the bacteria and push them to the cell surface, where T-cells can bind with the TB bacteria and kill them. The researchers co-infected human dendritic cells with HIV and TB, and they found that the cells had an inhibited immune response and were less able to activate the T-cells needed to kill the bacteria, thus, TB bacteria are more potent in people with HIV.
"We have now shown that HIV has a clear effect also on the innate immune defense, in particular the dendritic cells, which link the innate and the adaptive immune defenses,” explains Dr. Blomgran. “Much work remains to be done, but we can already suggest that one important future treatment strategy for infection should be to find ways to strengthen or boost cells in the immune defense using what is known as 'host-directed therapy'.”
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