Ly6G+ granulocytes-derived IL-17 limits protective host responses and promotes tuberculosis pathogenesis
Priya Sharma, Raman Deep Sharma, Binayak Sarkar, Varnika Panwar, Mrinmoy Das, Lakshya Veer Singh, Neharika Jain, Shivam Chaturvedi, et al. (22 authors)
eLife · 2026-02
Abstract
The protective correlates of Mycobacterium tuberculosis ( Mtb ) infection-elicited host immune responses are incompletely understood. Here, we report pro-pathogenic crosstalk involving Ly6G + granulocytes (Ly6G + Gra), IL-17, and COX2. We show that in the lungs of Mtb -infected wild-type mice, either BCG-vaccinated or not, most intracellular bacilli are Ly6G + Gra-resident 4 weeks post-infection onwards. In the genetically susceptible ifng -/- mice, excessive Ly6G + Gra infiltration correlates with severe bacteremia. Neutralizing IL-17 (anti-IL17mAb) and COX2 inhibition by celecoxib reverse Ly6G + Gra infiltration, associated pathology, and death in ifng -/- mice. Surprisingly, Ly6G + Gra also serves as the major source of IL-17 in the lungs of Mtb -infected WT or ifng -/- mice. The IL-17-COX2-Ly6G + Gra interplay also operates in WT mice. Inhibiting RORγt, the key transcription factor for IL-17 production or COX2, reduces the bacterial burden in Ly6G + Gra, leading to reduced bacterial burden and pathology in the lungs of WT mice. In the Mtb -infected WT mice, COX2 inhibition abrogates IL-17 levels in the lung homogenates and significantly enhances BCG’s protective efficacy, mainly by targeting the Ly6G + Gra-resident Mtb pool, a phenotype also observed when IL-17 is blocked by RORγt inhibitor. Furthermore, in pulmonary TB patients, high neutrophil count and IL-17 correlated with adverse treatment outcomes. Together, our results suggest that IL-17 and PGE2 are the negative correlates of protection, and we propose targeting the pro-pathogenic IL-17-COX2-Ly6G + Gra axis for TB prevention and therapy.
MeSH terms
- Immune system
- Immunology
- Pathogenesis
- Tuberculosis
- Intracellular
- Biology
- Phenotype
- Transcription factor
- Infectious dose
- Host factors
- Medicine
- Host factor
- Immunity
- Microbiology
- Intracellular parasite
- Crosstalk
- Virology
- Antigen
- Downregulation and upregulation
- Lung
- Innate immune system