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Use of the Human Granulysin Transgenic Mice To Evaluate the Role of Granulysin Expression by CD8 T Cells in Immunity To Mycobacterium tuberculosis. | LitMetric

The cytotoxic granules of human NK and CD8 T cells contain the effector molecule granulysin. Although studies indicate that granulysin is bactericidal to Mycobacterium tuberculosis and human CD8 T cells restrict intracellular M. tuberculosis by granule exocytosis, the role of granulysin in cell-mediated immunity against infection is incompletely understood, in part because a granulysin gene ortholog is absent in mice. Transgenic mice that express human granulysin (GNLY-Tg) under the control of human regulatory DNA sequences permit the study of granulysin . We assessed whether granulysin expression by murine CD8 T cells enhances their control of M. tuberculosis infection. GNLY-Tg mice did not control pulmonary M. tuberculosis infection better than non-Tg control mice, and purified GNLY-Tg and non-Tg CD8 T cells had a similar ability to transfer protection to T cell deficient mice. Lung CD8 T cells from infected control and GNLY-transgenic mice similarly controlled intracellular M. tuberculosis growth in macrophages . Importantly, after M. tuberculosis infection of GNLY-Tg mice, granulysin was detected in NK cells but not in CD8 T cells. Only after prolonged stimulation could granulysin expression be detected in antigen-specific CD8 T cells. GNLY-Tg mice are an imperfect model to determine whether granulysin expression by CD8 T cells enhances immunity against M. tuberculosis. Better models expressing granulysin are needed to explore the role of this antimicrobial effector molecule . Human CD8 T cells express the antimicrobial peptide granulysin in their cytotoxic granules, and analysis suggest that it restricts growth of Mycobacterium tuberculosis and other intracellular pathogens. The murine model of tuberculosis cannot assess granulysin's role , as rodents lack the granulysin gene. A long-held hypothesis is that murine CD8 T cells inefficiently control M. tuberculosis infection because they lack granulysin. We used human granulysin transgenic (GNLY-Tg) mice to test this hypothesis. GNLY-Tg mice did not differ in their susceptibility to tuberculosis. However, granulysin expression by pulmonary CD8 T cells could not be detected after M. tuberculosis infection. As the pattern of granulysin expression in human CD8 T cells and GNLY-Tg mice seem to differ, GNLY-Tg mice are an imperfect model to study the role of granulysin. An improved model is needed to answer the importance of granulysin expression by CD8 T cells in different diseases.

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http://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pmc/articles/PMC9765553PMC
http://dx.doi.org/10.1128/mbio.03020-22DOI Listing

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