Type I IFN drives neutrophil swarming, impeding lung T cell–macrophage interactions and TB control
William J. Branchett, Evangelos Stavropoulos, Jessica M. Shields, Alaa Al‐Dibouni, Marcos S. Cardoso, Ana Isabel Fernandes, Lúcia Moreira-Teixeira, Hubert Slawinski, et al. (12 authors)
The Journal of Experimental Medicine · 2025-09
Abstract
The early immune mechanisms determining Mycobacterium tuberculosis infection outcome are unclear. Using bulk and scRNA-seq over the first weeks of infection, we describe an unexpected, higher early pulmonary type I IFN response in relatively resistant C57BL/6 as compared with highly TB-susceptible C3HeB/FeJ mice. C57BL/6 mice showed pronounced early monocyte-derived macrophage (MDM) accumulation and extensive CD4+ T cell-MDM interactions in lung lesions, accompanied by high expression of T cell-attractant chemokines by MDMs. Conversely, lesions in C3HeB/FeJ mice were dominated by neutrophils with high expression of pro-inflammatory chemokines, from which CD4+ T cells were spatially segregated. Early type I IFN signaling blockade reduced bacterial load and neutrophil swarming within early TB lesions while increasing CD4+ T cell numbers in both C57BL/6 and C3HeB/FeJ mice, with later more pronounced effects on bacterial load in C3HeB/FeJ mice. These data suggest that early type I IFN signaling during M. tuberculosis infection favors neutrophil accumulation and limits CD4+ T cell infiltration into developing lesions.
MeSH terms
- Immunology
- Chemokine
- Mycobacterium tuberculosis
- Lung
- Immune system
- Tuberculosis
- Blockade
- Infiltration (HVAC)
- Chemotaxis
- Medicine
- Biology
- Macrophage
- T cell
- Inflammation
- Signal transduction
- Interferon
- Cell type
- Cell
- Microbiology
- Lung infection