AI Article Synopsis

  • Diabetes mellitus (DM) affects immune responses, potentially increasing the risk for developing active tuberculosis (TB) in individuals with hyperglycemia.
  • A study examined the immune function of macrophages in DM patients with and without TB, as well as in non-diabetic TB patients and controls, revealing that those with PTB+DM showed a significant reduction in phagocytic capacity.
  • Key immune receptors (PRRs) were altered in expression among PTB+DM patients, leading to higher reactive oxygen species (ROS) but lower nitric oxide (NO) levels, which were linked to more severe disease outcomes.

Article Abstract

Diabetes mellitus (DM) alters immune responses and given the rising prevalence of DM in tuberculosis (TB) endemic countries; hyperglycemia can be a potential risk factor for active TB development. However, the impact of hyperglycemia on TB-specific innate immune response in terms of macrophage functions remains poorly addressed. We assessed macrophage effector functions in uncontrolled DM patients with or without TB infection (PTB+DM and DM), non-diabetic TB patients (PTB), and non-diabetic-uninfected controls. Phagocytic capacity against BCG and surface expression of different pattern recognition receptors (PRRs) (CD11b, CD14, CD206, MARCO, and TLR-2) were measured via flow cytometry. Effector molecules (ROS and NO) required for bacterial killing were assessed via DCFDA and Griess reaction respectively. A systematic dysregulation in phagocytic capacity with concurrent alterations in the expression pattern of key PRRs (CD11b, MARCO, and CD206) was observed in PTB+DM. These altered PRR expressions were associated with decreased phagocytic capacity of macrophages. Similarly, ROS was aberrantly higher while NO was lower in PTB+DM. These altered macrophage functions were positively correlated with increasing disease severity. Our results highlight several key patterns of immune dysregulation against TB infection under hyperglycemic conditions and highlight a negative impact of hyperglycemia with etiology and progression of TB.

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http://dx.doi.org/10.1002/eji.202249839DOI Listing

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