AI Article Synopsis

  • Tuberculosis (TB) remains a global health issue, causing around 1.5 million deaths each year, and the BCG vaccine provides inconsistent protection depending on geographic and demographic factors.
  • Around 90% of people infected with TB are able to control the infection naturally, suggesting that enhancing the immune system could improve vaccine effectiveness.
  • A study using a small molecule inhibitor (DPP) showed promise in improving the immune response to a modified BCG vaccine in mice by reducing anti-inflammatory responses and boosting pro-inflammatory immune activity, leading to better resistance against TB.

Article Abstract

Tuberculosis (TB) is a significant and continuing problem worldwide, with a death toll of around 1.5 million human lives annually. BCG, the only vaccine against TB, offers a varied degree of protection among human subjects in different regions and races of the world. The majority of the population living near the tropics carries a varying degree of tolerance against BCG due to the widespread prevalence of non-tuberculous mycobacteria (NTM). Interestingly, ≈90% of the infected population restrain the bacilli on its own, which strengthens the notion of empowering the host immune system to advance the protective efficacy of existing mycobacterial vaccines. In general, modulates IL-10/STAT3 signaling to skew host mononuclear phagocytes toward an alternatively activated, anti-inflammatory state that helps it thrive against hostile immune advances. We hypothesized that modulating the IL-10/STAT3 driven anti-inflammatory effects in mononuclear cells may improve the prophylactic ability of TB vaccines. This study investigated the immunotherapeutic ability of a porphyrin based small molecule inhibitor of IL-10/STAT3 axis, 5, 15-diphenyl porphyrin (DPP), in improving anti-TB immunity offered by second generation recombinant BCG30 (rBCG30-ARMF-II) vaccine in mice. The DPP therapy potentiated vaccine induced anti-TB immunity by down-modulating anti-inflammatory responses, while simultaneously up-regulating pro-inflammatory immune effector responses in the immunized host. The employed DPP based immunotherapy led to the predominant activation/proliferation of pro-inflammatory monocytes/macrophages/DCs, the concerted expansion of CD4+/CD8+ effector and central memory T cells, alongside balanced Th17 and Treg cell amplification, and conferred augmented resistance to aerosol challenge in rBCG30 immunized BALB/c mice.

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Source
http://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pmc/articles/PMC8586420PMC
http://dx.doi.org/10.3389/fimmu.2021.706727DOI Listing

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