Mycobacterium tuberculosis-specific T cells restrain anti-cancer drug-induced neutrophilic lung inflammation in tuberculosis

结核分枝杆菌特异性T细胞抑制抗癌药物诱导的结核病中性粒细胞性肺部炎症

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作者:Kee Woong Kwon # ,Tae Gun Kang # ,Jii Bum Lee ,Eunsol Choi ,Hagyu Kim ,Min Chul Park ,Sangwon Choi ,Kyungmin Kim ,Hyeong Woo Kim ,Su Jin Jeong ,Hye Ryun Kim ,Sung Jae Shin ,Sang-Jun Ha

Abstract

Cancers are a risk factor for active tuberculosis (TB), and anti-cancer drugs can independently cause TB progression. To understand the underlying mechanisms, mice infected with Mycobacterium tuberculosis (Mtb) were treated with gemcitabine (Gem), cisplatin, or paclitaxel. These treatments delay Mtb-specific T cell responses, increase bacterial loads, and cause hyperinflammation with permissive neutrophils in the lungs. However, depleting Mtb-permissive neutrophils reduce bacterial levels and G-CSF production, thereby attenuating lung immunopathology. Additionally, Mtb-specific T cell responses generated by BCG vaccination inhibit bacterial growth and neutrophil infiltration even after Gem treatment. Gem induces granulocyte-biased generation in the bone marrow via G-CSF signaling, which led to lung neutrophil inflammation. However, pre-existing Mtb-specific T cell responses from BCG vaccination normalizes granulopoiesis by restricting G-CSF production. These findings show the mechanism of anti-cancer drug-induced neutrophilic lung inflammation in TB and highlight the role of Mtb-specific T cell responses in maintaining balanced hematopoiesis against Gem-induced TB immunopathogenesis.

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