Litcius/Paper detail

CD4 T cell dysfunction is associated with bacterial recrudescence during chronic tuberculosis

Evelyn Chang, Kelly Cavallo, Samuel M. Behar

2025Nature Communications30 citationsDOIOpen Access PDF

Abstract

While most people contain Mycobacterium tuberculosis infection, some individuals develop active disease, usually within two years of infection. Why immunity fails after initially controlling infection is unknown. C57BL/6 mice control Mycobacterium tuberculosis for up to a year but ultimately succumb to disease. We hypothesize that the development of CD4 T cell dysfunction permits bacterial recrudescence. We developed a reductionist model to assess antigen-specific T cells during chronic infection and found evidence of CD4 T cell senescence and exhaustion. In C57BL/6 mice, CD4 T cells upregulate coinhibitory receptors and lose effector cytokine production. Single cell RNAseq shows that only a small number of CD4 T cells in the lungs of chronically infected mice are polyfunctional. While the origin and causal relationship between T-cell dysfunction and recrudescence remains uncertain, we propose T cell dysfunction leads to a feed-forward loop that causes increased bacillary numbers, greater T cell dysfunction, and progressive disease. Chang et al. show that CD4 T cell exhaustion and senescence develop during chronic Mycobacterium tuberculosis infection. These factors may promote a feed-forward loop that permits increased bacterial replication, further loss of T cell function, both which culminate in recrudescence and disease.

Topics & Concepts

TuberculosisMedicineMycobacterium tuberculosisCellImmunologyBiologyGeneticsPathologyTuberculosis Research and EpidemiologyMycobacterium research and diagnosisClostridium difficile and Clostridium perfringens research