-
Mycobacterium
africanum
-
African I variant in West Africa (nitratase-)
-
African II variant in East Africa (nitratase+)
-
Mycobacterium
bovis (a.k.a. Mycobacterium tuberculosis var. bovis
; dysgonic growth : small flat colonies)
M. bovis is negative for nicotinamidase and pyrazinamidase,
and, does not reduce nitrate, whereas
M. tuberculosis is positive
in the 2 tests and reduces nitrate. Since it does not have pyrazinamidase,
M.
bovis is resistant for pyrazinamide. The pncA (pyrazinamidase)
gene involved in bacterial activation of pyrazinamide contains in
M.
bovis a point mutation that renders pyrazinamidase unable to catalyze
drug
activation to produce the drug's active metabolite, pyrazinoic acid.
However, rare strains of
M. bovis may be sensitive to the drug.
The variations in biochemical as well as molecular characteristics among
several members of the
Mycobacterium tuberculosis complex that are
not
M. tuberculosis have been assessed to facilitate an unambiguous
species
identification. Altogether, 96
M. tuberculosis complex strains
including 52
M. bovis isolates and 44
M. africanum isolates
were analyzed by spoligotyping. The strains could be clustered into 5 spoligotype
groups. All
M. bovis isolates showed the typical absence of the
spacers 39 to 43 and typical biochemical properties. However, within these
strains we found a group of strains that had a spoligotype pattern which
is clearly defined by the additional absence of spacers 3 to 16 and that
were uncommonly susceptible to pyrazinamide (PZA). This spoligotype pattern
has previously been described as being typical for a caprine genotype because
of its predominant isolation from sheep and goats. Due to the clinical
importance of PZA resistance, we propose 2
M. bovis subtypes:
M.
bovis subtype
bovis, which is resistant to PZA, and
M. bovissubtype
caprae,
which is susceptible to PZA [Now known as
M. caprae]. 2 additional
strains that clustered in group 3 showed biochemical and genetic properties
typical for
M. bovis and were also sensitive to PZA; thus, they
may represent a 3rd PZA-susceptible
M. bovis subtype
ref
Epidemiology
:
-
USA : human infection from bovine tuberculosis caused by Mycobacterium
bovis has been mostly, but not completely, eradicated by the use of
pasteurization of milk and culling of herds shown positive on skin testing,
starting in about 1917. It continues to be reported in the USA, primarily
in immigrantsref,
although it generally accounts for < 1% of all mycobacterial isolates.
Between 1975 and 1978 several foci of M. bovis were identified primarily
in white-tailed deer (Odocoileus virginianus) in several counties
on the lower Michigan peninsula, which caused the M. bovis Accredited-Free
Status to be suspended and the loss of as much as USD 74 million by the
livestock industry of the state. Among the surveys of M. bovis in
Michigan free-ranging white-tailed deer is one from 1997ref,
in which examination of 354 hunter-harvested deer showed gross lesions
of tuberculosis in 15 deer and a further 16 with histologic evidence of
tuberculosis, 12 of which yielded M. bovis. A later study from 2002
reported an apparent decrease in TB prevalence in deer of about 50% by
banning baiting and feeding and increasing antlerless permitsref.
Bovine TB has appeared in recent years in Texas, California, New Mexico,
Michigan, and Minnesota (1st case since 1971 in 2005). According to the
USDA regulations on how a state is classified, the state is allowed one
case in 2 years without losing its TB-free status
-
UK : 50 new human cases per year, but the great majority of prevalence
is in the older age groups who contracted infection prior to pasteurization
and are now suffering from the effects of that 50 or so years later. 475
herds, out of 1773 (31%) in Gloucestershire, UK, were put under TB restrictions
in 2003 (up from to 25% in 2002) because of an outbreak of the disease
at some time : although Gloucestershire has experienced fewer outbreaks
than counties such as Devon and Cornwall, the percentage of herds experiencing
infections is considerably higher. The number of herds under TB restrictions
on 31 Dec 2003 stood at 3074, i.e. 3.2% of the national herd (out of a
total of approximately 96 000 herds)
Transmission
: it infects
-
Bos taurus
(bovine tuberculosis)
-
Meles meles
(changes in badgers' social life after culling could undermine efforts
to control bovine tuberculosis as the surviving badgers bunch up, causing
groups' territories to overlap more, possibly promoting disease transmission).
The spillover of bovine TB from the highly infected, dense badger population
in Cornwall to other species, wild and domestic porcines included, should
not be surprising
-
Sus scrofa

-
Cervidae

-
opossum
-
ferret
-
buffalo
-
bison
-
Ovis
aries

-
Capra hircus

-
Equus
caballus

-
Camelidae

-
antelopes
-
Canis familiaris

-
Felis
catus

-
foxes
-
mink
-
primates
-
llamas
-
kudus
-
elands
-
tapirs
-
elks
-
elephants
-
sitatungas [wild bovines]
-
rhinoceroses
-
ground squirrels
-
otters
-
seals
-
hares
-
moles
-
raccoons
-
coyotes
-
several predatory felines including
Aerosol exposure is considered to be the most frequent route of infection
of cattle through (close contact such as nose-to-nose contact or nasal/oral
secretions), but infection by ingestion of contaminated material also occurs.
Characteristic tuberculous lesions occur most frequently in the lungs (
pulmonary
tuberculosis (PTB)
)
and the retropharyngeal, bronchial, and mediastinal lymph nodes (
mediastinic
lymphadenitis
).
Lesions can also be found in the mesenteric lymph nodes (
mesenteric
lymphadenitis
),
liver, spleen, on serous membranes, and in other organs. Humans can also
be infected by the consumption of unpasteurized milk (even in BCG vaccinated
individuals ?) : this route of transmission can lead to extrapulmonary
TB
ref.
Airborne transmission of
M. bovis was highlighted by a number of
cases of infection in zookeepers caring for a sick rhinoceros
ref
-
Mycobacterium
cannettii
-
Mycobacterium
caprae
-
Mycobacterium
microti (a.k.a. vole bacillus)
=> rare pulmonary
tuberculosis (PTB)
in immunocompetent or HIV-1
+
individuals.
-
Mycobacterium
tuberculosis (a.k.a. Mycobacterium tuberculosis var.
hominis
; tubercle bacillus; Koch bacillus, eugonic growth, 8 phagotypes,
facultative
intracellular pathogen)
Mutants are categorized
by their growth characteristics compared with those of wild-type
M.
tuberculosis :
-
severe growth in vivo mutants
-
growth in vivo mutants
-
persistence mutants
-
pathology mutants
-
dissemination mutants
Genomics : genes
involved in fatty acid catabolism have undergone extensive duplication
in the genus
Mycobacterium. Prokaryotic- and eukaryotic-like isoforms
of the glyoxylate cycle enzyme isocitrate lyase (ICL) are jointly required
for fatty acid catabolism and virulence in
Mycobacterium tuberculosis.
Although deletion of icl1 or icl2, the genes that encode ICL1 and ICL2,
respectively, had little effect on bacterial growth in macrophages and
mice, deletion of both genes resulted in complete impairment of intracellular
replication and rapid elimination from the lungs. The feasibility of targeting
ICL1 and ICL2 for chemical inhibition was shown using a dual-specific ICL
inhibitor, which blocked growth of
M. tuberculosis on fatty acids
and in macrophages. The absence of ICL orthologs in mammals should facilitate
the development of glyoxylate cycle inhibitors as new drugs for the treatment
of tuberculosis
ref.
Proteomics
:
-
mycobacterial lipopeptide 19 kDa binds to TLR1/TLR2
heterodimer

-
MPB64
-
MPB70
-
23-kDa superoxide dismutase (SOD)
-
27-kDa
-
inducers of DCs maturation
-
antigen 85 (Ag85) complex / mycolyl-transferase is composed of a
group of secreted proteins that are known to bind fibronectin.
-
Ag85a / MPT44
-
Ag85b / MPT59
-
Ag85c / MPT45
-
MPT51 / 26 kDa
-
MPT64 / 26 kDa
-
latency associated hspX (a-cristallin)
-
region of deletion-1 (RD1) locus consists of at least 11 genes,
including esxA and esxB genes, which encode the strong T-cell
antigens 6-kDa early secretory antigenic target (ESAT-6) (unknown
function) and its binding partner 10-kDa culture filtrate protein (CFP-10)
respectively, as well as a variable number of flanking genes encoding a
secretory apparatus
-
Mycobacterium
tuberculosis secretory Ag (MTSA)
-
phosphate transport receptor (PstS)
-
the mycobacterial proteasome degrades proteins that are irreversibly
oxidized, nitrated, or nitrosated, protecting the organism against ROS
and reactive
nitrogen intermediates (RNIs)
-
peptide methionine sulfoxide reductase (msrA) protects bacteria
against oxidative damage from reactive
nitrogen intermediates (RNIs)

-
heparin-binding haemagglutinin (HBHA) : methylation is crucial for
the induction of protective T-cell immunity to this pathogen. HBHA is a
cell-surface protein antigen, and the native protein (nHBHA) is post-translationally
modified by methylation of lysine-rich repeats in the carboxy-terminal
: the methylated portion of HBHA forms part of the T-cell epitopes. The
distinct abilities of nHBHA and unmethylated recombinant HBHA (rHBHA) produced
by Escherichia coli to induce protection correlated with splenocytes
from nHBHA-immunized mice producing considerably more IFN-g
in response to bone-marrow-derived macrophages pulsed with M. tuberculosis
and
more-efficiently lysing BCG-loaded macrophagesref.
-
Mycobacterium tuberculosis mechanisms targeting MHC
class II
expression are effective at inhibiting antigen presentation, but only after
a delay of at least 10 h. By comparison, the effectiveness of mechanisms
targeting other cellular processes is immediate, but may be attenuated
under certain conditionsref
-
MbtI (rv2386c) catalyzes the initial transformation in mycobactin
biosynthesis by converting chorismate to salicylate. MbtI is part of a
larger family of chorismate-binding enzymes descended from a common ancestor
(the MST family), that includes the isochorismate synthases and anthranilate
synthases. The lack of active site residues unique to pyruvate eliminating
members of this family, combined with the observed chorismate mutase activity,
suggests that MbtI may exploit a sigmatropic pyruvate elimination mechanism
similar to that proposed for PchB from Pseudomonas aeruginosaref
Transmission
: recent observations in Spain showed that
Mycobacterium tuberculosis
strains
of bovine and caprine origin circulate in the same local wildlife populations
and that 6 out of 11 spoligotypes were similar to types described in human
cases. The isolation of
M.tuberculosis complex strains (belonging
either to
M. bovis or to
M. caprae), in fenced estates, from
cervids and wild boars that have not had contact with domestic livestock
for at least 2 decades, strongly suggest that the
M. tuberculosis
complex is able to survive in these populations
ref.
The Environmental Council will advance the wild boar hunting season in
Els Ports national hunting reserve to September 2005, allowing intensification
of their capture rate. This, in order to reduce the wild boar population
and stop dissemination of tuberculosis, which was initially detected at
the end of 2004.Wildlife management aimed at reducing the density of susceptible
animals within an infected area may contribute to the control of infectious
diseases in animals and -- if zoonotic -- their spillover to humans. The
major predator of wild boars, in places where you don't have wolves and
mountain lions, happens to be male wild boars, who frequently unearth,
kill, and eat the litters of territorial rivals. (This is why boars and
young are always separated at pig farms.) In addition, the size of surviving
boar litters is closely governed by the accessibility of food to the females.
The more boars you shoot, accordingly, the more boars you end up with.
The males are much more likely to be shot, being more often diurnal in
habits and much less likely to spend their days underground. The females
will benefit by food abundance, will raise larger litters, the litters
will be subject to markedly less predation, and within a year there will
be more boars in the habitat than ever, spreading more TB than ever (unless
you have a major food crop failure, e.g., an acute shortage of acorns.)
Swine behavior is certainly territorial and subscribes to survival of the
meanest and fittest. It is not my intention to imply this is the way all
breeds of swine behave; this is only an observation of behavior of wild
boars and may provide food for thought for those in the council as to how
they want to implement their plan with regard to swine tuberculosis. There
may need to be more information on the documentation on what the author
has sent, as based upon these comments alone, it would be possible to ban
hunting altogether. I am not sure that is the proper approach either. A
lot of work on management of feral pigs (which seem to have similar ecology)
has been carried out in Australia. They have also prepared a detailed emergency
plan in case FMD is introduced into their large pig population. They compared
various pig control methods, such as hunting with dogs, trapping, and poisoned
baits (mainly warfarin). A typical conclusion was: "Hunting was generally
not as effective in reducing pig numbers as poisoning with warfarin, but
could be useful for obtaining samples of pigs for monitoring disease during
the first few days of an exotic disease outbreak, and also for killing
pigs that have survived other control methods". (JC Mcilroy and RJ Saillard,
1989: The Effect of Hunting With Dogs on the Numbers and Movements
of Feral Pigs, Sus-Scrofa, and the Subsequent Success of Poisoning Exercises
in Namadgi-National-Park. Australian Wildlife Research 16(3) 353-363).
European wild boars do not "[un]earth" nor do they live "underground,"
and there are limited records of cannibalism (Gortazar et al., Ann NY Acad
Sci, 2002). Food availability is probably the main factor affecting wild
boar densities, even more than hunting and far more than predation and
cannibalism. Litter size is not only affected by food availability but
also by disease prevalence and population structure. Adult females have
larger litters (Ruiz-Fons et al., Theriogenology, in press). Hunting usually
reduces the proportion of adults in a population. Hence, the sentence "the
more boars you shoot, the more boars you end up with" is also not correct.
If shooting (or any other means of population control) is done in areas
with abundant food (sometimes provided by the hunters), I agree that it
makes little sense for density reduction. But, if a ban of artificial feeding
takes place at the same time you increase hunting pressure, I am sure you
will be able to affect the wild boar population dynamics and achieve a
lower density
ref.
The management of wild boar and/or feral pig populations has been studied
and discussed, in recent years in various countries, also in relation to
the control or prevention of several animal diseases besides bovine tuberculosis:
hog cholera, trichinellosis, African swine fever, FMD (extensive studies
in Australia since 1992) and others.
Epidemiology
:
-
prevalence of infection : 1.7 billion people (dropped by > 20% since
1990 to 2005ref), 12
million are coinfected with HIV-1
(66% live in Sub-Saharan Africa). Middle East accounted for 7% of all incident
cases of tuberculosis globally as of 2002ref
-
China : a 3-month-long survey covering nearly 400,000 school children
has found that nearly 9% of students under the age of 14 in primary and
middle schools in Harbin tested highly positive for tuberculosis (TB) at
a tuberculin forearm skin test. The X-rays revealed > 100 children have
already begun to show symptoms of TB. Chinese babies are usually given
the BCG vaccine for the prevention of TB within 24 hours of birth. Those
who tested negative have been advised to get vaccinated as soon as possible,
albeit on a voluntary basis
-
Nepal : 60% of Nepal's adult human population is infected with Mycobacterium
tuberculosis; > 80 000 have active TB infections; 44 000 people develop
active disease every year, of whom 20 000 have active infectious TB; 6000-8000
people die from TB annually male-to-female ratio of registered TB patients
is 2:1ref
-
Italy : 12-13%
-
USA : foreign-born persons account for > 50% the cases of tuberculosis
in the USA reported to the CDC, a rate that is 9 times that among those
born in the USAref.
In Massachusetts, 80% of the cases reported in 2003 occurred in foreign-born
persons, most of whom had resided in the USA for 1-4 yearsref.
-
Botswana : 60% of TB patients are infected with HIV. Resistance
to at least one drug in new patients rose from 3.7% in 1995 to 10.4% in
2002. Interventions for tuberculosis control are urgently needed in Botswana
to prevent further emergence of drug resistanceref.
-
incidence of infection : 8 million new cases / yr (12÷33%);
reemerging in HIV-1
+
individuals => chemoprophylaxis when [CD4+]blood
< 200 / mL ; people who are infected but
have not developed disease are not infectious; risk of developing disease
following infections : < 10%. Half of these, about 5%, will have
active disease in the first 2 years and the other half, sometime during
the rest of their lives. If, however, the contacts are profoundly immunocompromised
such as HIV-infected individuals, the risk of active TB is closer to 10%
per year as opposed to 10% per lifetime.
-
China 485,000 new cases every year
-
Italy 20 new cases per year every 100,000 inhabitants
-
prevalence of disease : 20÷30 millions (60÷80% acquire
infection within age 20 : 20% in westernized countries (in Italy 5÷6
cases every 100,000 inhabitants, expecially reactivations in elderlies),
80% in developing countries (Latin America, subsaharian Africa and Southern
Asia)) ; a person with active disease infects up to 10÷15 individuals
/ yr. 75% of male Indian smokers who become ill with TB would not have
done so if they had not smoked : in some parts of the world the main way
smoking
kills is not via cancer and heart disease, but by damaging the lung's defenses
against chronic TB infection. Smokers are about 4 times as likely to become
ill with TB as are non-smokers, and consequently 4 times as likely to die
from the disease. If infected, children aged < 2 years are at high risk
for severe tuberculosis (TB) disease (e.g., TB meningitis)ref.
-
mortality : 1.6÷3 million / yr (5% of infected; 50%
of disease cases;
-
Italy : 0.5%
-
Asia : > 1 million
-
India has more TB deaths than any other country. 400,000 are co-infected
with HIV-1

-
Africa : 400,000
-
outbreaks : the largest TB investigation in Dutch history begins
in Zeist on Mon 31 Jan 2005. A 25-year-old employee of a C1000 supermarket
in was diagnosed with a very infectious form of TB in November 2004. In
Dec 2004, a "1st ring" contact investigationref,
using tuberculin skin testing (Mantoux) and/or chest x-ray, revealed that
all family members and close contacts of the index case (n=12) tested positive
for LTBI, and 1 active case of TB was diagnosed. A "2nd ring" contact investigation
was then performed, where all current and former colleagues of the index
patient were tested and 44/77 current employees and 14/26 former employees
tested positive for LTBI by Mantoux test. 1 active case of TB was also
diagnosed in this group. Because of these results, an investigation of
a "3rd ring" of contacts, which included all people who had visited this
supermarket between 1 Jan and 18 Nov 2004, was launched. Zeist City Council
and the health authority GGD Midden-Nederland decided to examine every
customer who shopped at the supermarket between 18 Nov 2004 and 1 Jan 2005
based on a telephone survey. Between 31 Jan and 4 Feb 2005, over 21 000
people in the city of Zeist in the Netherlands were tested for latent tuberculosis
infection (LTBI) or active tuberculosis (TB) : 5% were expected to have
been infected with the bacteria, but it could also be 10% : the infection
rate is dependent on many factors. This includes how closely the infected
supermarket employee came into contact with customers. 75% of the C1000
customers urged to report for an examination will undergo Mantoux tests.
Mantoux tests were performed on 15,515 people and 6000 people aged > 60
were screened by chest x-ray taken in a mobile health clinic. In total,
350/14 128 people (2.5%) whose Mantoux tests were evaluated had a positive
reaction (> 14 mm). Those 350 people with suspected infections, and an
additional 58 people (patients with suspected pulmonary problems, abnormal
chest x-ray, or patients with risk factors for TB in conjunction with a
Mantoux 5-14mm) were invited for further diagnostic tests at the tuberculosis
clinic of the Municipal Health Department in Utrecht during Feb 2005. To
date, about 2/3 of the 408 patients with either positive Mantoux test or
abnormal chest x-ray have been examined for TB, and 5 new cases have been
diagnosed. 1 of these 5 patients has open TB, and contact tracing linked
to this case has also been initiated. So far, no conclusion can be drawn
about the extent to which there has been an increased transmission of tuberculosis
to customers in this supermarket. Data collection is continuing, and descriptive
analysis of the 408 possible cases of LTBI has begun. It would be useful
to assess a similar cohort of individuals in the community who did not
shop at this supermarket for comparison with the group of 408 additional
shoppers. It is not stated in the posting whether the index case had laryngeal
tuberculosis or not. Having a positive Mantoux skin test for TB, assuming
that the test was performed and read appropriately, reflects previous exposure
to TB, not necessarily active infection at that time. Individuals with
a positive skin test (Lutwick LI: Tuberculin skin testing. In, Tuberculosis,
A Clinical Handbook. Lutwick LI (ed), Chapam & Hall, London, UK, 1995)
have an approximately 10% chance of developing active tuberculosis in their
lifetimes, 5% in the 1st 2 years and 5% afterwards. The risk of reactivation
can be as high as 10% per year in AIDS patients. It is not clear how an
estimate of 5-10% skin test reactivity after this exposure for those shopping
in the store is suggested, as infectivity correlates with degree of exposure.
Family and close friends having a high degree of skin test reactivity (it
is likely the case that none of them have been found to have overt infection)
does not necessarily suggest a high degree of transmission to much more
casual contacts in less confined areas
A person with recently diagnosed culture-confirmed, extensively drug-resistant
pulmonary tuberculosis (XDR TB) traveled on the following 2 extended flights
(more than 8 hours in duration) in May 2007:
-
12 May 2007 Atlanta, GA (ATL) Paris, France (CDG)/ Air France #385 / Delta
#8517
-
24 May 2007 Prague, Czech Republic Montreal, Canada/ Czech Air #0104
A 2nd round of TB evaluation and testing should be done because a negative
TST or QFT-G result obtained less than 8 weeks after exposure may be
considered unreliable for excluding latent tuberculosis infection (LTBI).
Transmission
:
-
inhalation of desiccated Pflüger
droplets
with Ø < 6 mm (1 droplet nucleus contains
no more than 3 bacilli); Schrön-Much's granules (gram-positive,
nonacid-fast granules and rods found in tuberculous sputum and thought
to be modified tubercle bacilli)
-
human-to-elephant and elephant-to-human transmission of tuberculosis are
known to occurref1,
ref2.
These aerosols remain suspended in air for prolonged periods of time in
closed, poorly ventilated settings, such as barns. It is in such a barn
setting that zoonotic transmission of tuberculosis between handlers and
infected elephants, confirmed by DNA fingerprinting, apparently occurred,
as reported by Michalak et al 1998. Presumably, the risk of transmission
would be small for persons with brief contacts with elephants in the outdoors,
as would occur with tourists. Elephants in the wild are said to be free
of tuberculosis. M. bovis has been isolated from an elephant in
the USAref.
Although the prevalence of M. bovis infection in people or other
animals is unknown because of the complexity and cost of differentiating
M.
bovis from other members of the M. tuberculosis complex,
M.
bovis infection is nevertheless likely to be widespread in developing
countries such as Nepal. Treatment of tuberculosis in elephants is reported
to be similar to that in humans, and involves use of a combined regimen
of INH (isoniazid), RIF
(rifampicin), PZA (pyrazinamide), and ethambutol. However, M. bovis
is inherently resistant to PZA and susceptibility testing to PZA is not
routinely performed. A 6-month, short-course anti-mycobacterial therapy
in humans depends on having PZA as part of the drug regimen; without this
drug, therapy must be prolonged beyond 6 months. Also, MDR TB (multidrug-resistant
TB) is likely to be prevalent in Nepal and further complicate treatment
in elephants and their human contacts in this country ingestion of milk
or meat contaminated by M.bovisref
-
ingestion of urine from patients affected by renal TB
-
through the conjunctiva or broken skin
Pathogenesis : the development of a strong
T
h1-mediated adaptive immune response is considered of main
importance for host defense against the intracellular pathogen
Mycobacterium
tuberculosis. The induction of a cellular immune response is not only
dependent on the engagement of the TCR but also requires co-stimulation.
In order to study the role of the co-stimulatory molecule of the tumor
necrosis factor receptor family member CD27 during murine M. tuberculosis
infection, we intranasally infected wild-type (WT) and CD27 knockout (KO)
mice with 10
5 colony-forming units
M. tuberculosis. Whereas
there were no differences in bacterial growth, inflammation and IFN-
g
production by CD4
+ and CD8
+ lymphocytes in the lungs
early after infection, the number of splenic CD8
+ T cells producing
the key T
h1 cytokine IFN-
g was lower
in CD27 KO mice than in WT mice. After 6 weeks, CD27 KO mice had 3.6-fold
higher mycobacterial counts in their lungs and displayed more pulmonary
inflammation and increased numbers of infiltrated leukocytes. Despite these
differences early in infection, an equal number of WT and CD27 KO mice
died during a 43-week observation period and lung bacterial loads and inflammation
were comparable in the surviving animals. CD27 does not contribute to the
local IFN-
g-mediated response and long-term
protection against
M. tuberculosisref.
CD44
highCD62L
low effector CD4 T lymphocytes generated
during the course of mycobacterial infection can be segregated into 2 subsets
on the basis of CD27 receptor expression. Only the CD27
low subset
exhibited a high capacity for IFN-
g secretion,
indicating that low CD27 expression is characteristic of fully differentiated
effector CD4 T lymphocytes. CD27
low IFN-
g-producing
CD4 T lymphocytes accumulate in the lungs but are rare in LNs. Several
factors contribute to their preferential accumulation. First, CD27
low
CD4 T lymphocytes present in the LN are highly susceptible to apoptosis.
Second, circulating CD27
low CD4 T cells do not enter the LN
but efficiently migrate to the lungs. Third, CD27
high effector
CD4 T cells that enter the lungs down-regulate CD27 expression
in situ.
In genetically heterogeneous mice that exhibit varying susceptibility to
tuberculosis, the accumulation of mature CD27
low CD4 T cells
in the lungs correlates with the degree of protection against infection.
Thus, we propose that terminal maturation of effector CD4 T lymphocytes
in the periphery provides the host with efficient local defense and avoids
potentially harmful actions of inflammatory cytokines in lymphoid organs
ref.
=>
tuberculosis
(TB) / "White Plague" : the bacillus may colonize (
primary tuberculosis)
every organ (rare in exocrine glands and URT) except muscle tissues due
to lactic acid sensitivity :
-
cutaneous
tuberculosis / tuberculoderma

-
aerogenic or inhalation tuberculosis : tuberculosis caused by aspiration
of the tubercle bacilli into the lungs => pulmonary
tuberculosis (PTB)
(68%)
-
diffusion by contiguity =>
-
tuberculosis of serous membranes : tuberculosis involving the pleura,
peritoneum, pericardium, and cerebral meninges, producing inflammation
of those structures.
-
chronic
laryngitis
(tuberculous laryngitis / laryngeal tuberculosis / tuberculosis of larynx).
It has been generally accepted that laryngeal TB is the most highly infectious
form, but since most cases are associated with far advanced open cavitary
pulmonary disease, the infectivity of laryngeal TB alone has not been clearly
proven. In 2 patients with laryngeal TB without pulmonary disease, no evidence
of intrafamilial spread was found, suggesting the laryngeal disease in
itself may not be so infectiousref.
In a similar case isolated laryngeal TB was diagnosed, and despite a delay
in making the diagnosis, no family and hospital spread was found
-
tubercular pharyngitis
(pharyngeal tuberculosis)
-
disseminated tuberculosis : hematogenous (hematogenous tuberculosis)
or lymphohematogenous spread of tubercle bacilli from a primary focus of
infection; its incidence is increased among immunocompromised patients
(< 20% in immunocompetent, 60-70% in immunocompromised) => extrapulmonary
tuberculosis
-
superficial lymph nodes tuberculosis (painless lymphadenitis
;
when laterocervical and/or submandibular lymph nodes are involved, they
appear adherent to derma and create a sow-like look (scrofulosis / scrofula)
evolving to draining fistulae)
-
cerebral tuberculosis / tubercular meningitis
(expecially in babies and immunodepressed) : even in resource-rich countries,
where there is easy access to paediatric subspecialty care, infants with
tuberculous meningitis continue to have high mortality and morbidity, with
deaths happening in about 15% of patients and up to 50% of infants left
with serious neurological sequelaeref1,
ref2
-
tuberculosis of bones and joints : tuberculosis involving the bones
and joints, producing strumous arthritis, or white swelling, and cold abscess.
-
adrenal glands tuberculosis (primary
Addison disease
)
-
genitourinary tuberculosis : tuberculosis involving the genitourinary
tract, often the result of hemic dissemination of pulmonary tuberculosis
-
genital tuberculosis
-
urinary tuberculosis => Mycobacteria
in urines
-
ocular tuberculosis (dacryocystitis
,
scrofulous
ophthalmia
,
diffuse
scleritis
,
nodular
iritis
,
miliary
or disseminated choroiditis
)
-
oral tuberculosis : a rare condition usually occurring as a bloodborne
complication of pulmonary tuberculosis, most often involving the gingivae
(tuberculous gingivitis
)
and tongue, and characterized by the presence of small, crateriform, painless
ulcers that bleed readily and are surrounded by edema or reddish nodules
-
swallowing of phlegm =>
-
intestinal tuberculosis / tuberculosis of intestines : a form that
involves the intestines, with diarrhea
,
formation of spreading ulcers (especially of the lymphoid tissue as Mycobacteria
localize into isolated
lymphoid follicles (ILFs)
disposed along transversal axis), and sometimes eventual cicatricial stricture
=> tabes mesenterica or mesaraica (tuberculosis of the mesenteric
glands in children, resulting in digestive derangement and wasting of the
body) => Crohn
-like
disease in terminal ileum and caecum => tubercular peritonitis
.
-
reinfection tuberculosis : a new infection with tuberculosis in
a patient who was previously infected and cured
-
Ranke's stages : the hypothesis that tuberculosis of the lungs develops
in 3 stages: (1) the primary focus, (2) generalized spread of the tubercle
bacillus, and (3) isolated organ tuberculosis, chiefly of the lungs.
Resistance in HLA-DR4 haplotype, susceptibility
in HLA-Bw15
+. The supersusceptibility to tuberculosis 1 (
sst1)
genetic locus on mouse chromosome 1 contains the
intracellular pathogen
resistance 1 (Ipr1) gene, whose expression is upregulated in the
sst1
resistant macrophages after activation and infection (but is not expressed
in the
sst1 susceptible macrophages) limiting the multiplication
not only of
M. tuberculosis but also of other intracellular bacteria
as
Listeria monocytogenes, switching a cell death pathway of the
infected macrophages from necrosis to apoptosis
ref.
RF
in 10-25%.
Susceptibility : genetic defects in the
IFN-g
response pathway cause unique susceptibility to intracellular pathogens,
particularly mycobacteria, but are rare and do not explain mycobacterial
disease in the majority of affected patients. Acquired defects such as
anti-IFN-
g autoantibodies may cause a similar
immunological phenotype and thus explain the occurrence of disseminated
intracellular infections in some patients without identifiable immune deficiency
ref.