TB Research

Dual neutrophil subsets exacerbate or suppress inflammation in tuberculosis via IL-1β or PD-L1

Emilie Doz, Badreddine Bounab, Florence Carreras, Júlia S. Fahel, Sérgio C. Oliveira, Mohamed Lamkanfi, Yves Le Vern, Pierre Germon, et al. (13 authors)

Life Science Alliance · 2024-05

Abstract

Neutrophils can be beneficial or deleterious during tuberculosis (TB). Based on the expression of MHC-II and programmed death ligand 1 (PD-L1), we distinguished two functionally and transcriptionally distinct neutrophil subsets in the lungs of mice infected with mycobacteria. Inflammatory [MHC-II − , PD-L1 lo ] neutrophils produced inflammasome-dependent IL-1β in the lungs in response to virulent mycobacteria and “accelerated” deleterious inflammation, which was highly exacerbated in IFN-γR −/− mice. Regulatory [MHC-II + , PD-L1 hi ] neutrophils “brake” inflammation by suppressing T-cell proliferation and IFN-γ production. Such beneficial regulation, which depends on PD-L1, is controlled by IFN-γR signaling in neutrophils. The hypervirulent HN878 strain from the Beijing genotype curbed PD-L1 expression by regulatory neutrophils, abolishing the braking function and driving deleterious hyperinflammation in the lungs. These findings add a layer of complexity to the roles played by neutrophils in TB and may explain the reactivation of this disease observed in cancer patients treated with anti-PD-L1.

MeSH terms

  • Inflammation
  • Tuberculosis
  • Immunology
  • Major histocompatibility complex
  • Medicine
  • Biology