학술논문

A blood RNA transcript signature for TB exposure in household contacts.
Document Type
Journal Article
Source
BMC Infectious Diseases. 6/9/2020, Vol. 20 Issue 1, p1-8. 8p. 1 Diagram.
Subject
*INTERFERON gamma release tests
*TYPE I interferons
*SPINAL tuberculosis
*HOUSEHOLDS
*NUCLEOTIDE sequence
*GENE expression
*PSYCHONEUROIMMUNOLOGY
*RNA metabolism
*TUBERCULOSIS microbiology
*TUBERCULOSIS diagnosis
*PROTEINS
*RNA
*CELL receptors
*METABOLISM
*CASE-control method
*INTERFERONS
*NEUTROPHILS
*CONTACT tracing
TUBERCULOSIS transmission
Language
ISSN
1471-2334
Abstract
Background: Current tools for diagnosing latent TB infection (LTBI) detect immunological memory of past exposure but are unable to determine whether exposure is recent. We sought to identify a whole-blood transcriptome signature of recent TB exposure.Methods: We studied household contacts of TB patients; healthy volunteers without recent history of TB exposure; and patients with active TB. We performed whole-blood RNA sequencing (in all), an interferon gamma release assay (IGRA; in contacts and healthy controls) and PET/MRI lung scans (in contacts only). We evaluated differentially-expressed genes in household contacts (log2 fold change ≥1 versus healthy controls; false-discovery rate < 0.05); compared these to differentially-expressed genes seen in the active TB group; and assessed the association of a composite gene expression score to independent exposure/treatment/immunological variables.Results: There were 186 differentially-expressed genes in household contacts (n = 26, age 22-66, 46% male) compared with healthy controls (n = 5, age 29-38, 100% male). Of these genes, 141 (76%) were also differentially expressed in active TB (n = 14, age 27-69, 71% male). The exposure signature included genes from inflammatory response, type I interferon signalling and neutrophil-mediated immunity pathways; and genes such as BATF2 and SCARF1 known to be associated with incipient TB. The composite gene-expression score was higher in IGRA-positive contacts (P = 0.04) but not related to time from exposure, isoniazid prophylaxis, or abnormalities on PET/MRI (all P > 0.19).Conclusions: Transcriptomics can detect TB exposure and, with further development, may be an approach of value for epidemiological research and targeting public health interventions. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]