4.4 Article

Exposure to Cigarette Smoke Inhibits the Pulmonary T-Cell Response to Influenza Virus and Mycobacterium tuberculosis

Journal

INFECTION AND IMMUNITY
Volume 79, Issue 1, Pages 229-237

Publisher

AMER SOC MICROBIOLOGY
DOI: 10.1128/IAI.00709-10

Keywords

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Funding

  1. Flight Attendant Medical Research Institute [052338, 092015]
  2. Margaret E. Byers Cain Chair for Tuberculosis Research
  3. James Byers Cain Research Endowment

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Smoking is associated with increased susceptibility to tuberculosis and influenza. However, little information is available on the mechanisms underlying this increased susceptibility. Mice were left unexposed or were exposed to cigarette smoke and then infected with Mycobacterium tuberculosis by aerosol or influenza A by intranasal infection. Some mice were given a DNA vaccine encoding an immunogenic M. tuberculosis protein. Gamma interferon (IFN-gamma) production by T cells from the lungs and spleens was measured. Cigarette smoke exposure inhibited the lung T-cell production of IFN-gamma during stimulation in vitro with anti-CD3, after vaccination with a construct expressing an immunogenic mycobacterial protein, and during infection with M. tuberculosis and influenza A virus in vivo. Reduced IFN-gamma production was mediated through the decreased phosphorylation of transcription factors that positively regulate IFN-gamma expression. Cigarette smoke exposure increased the bacterial burden in mice infected with M. tuberculosis and increased weight loss and mortality in mice infected with influenza virus. This study provides the first demonstration that cigarette smoke exposure directly inhibits the pulmonary T-cell response to M. tuberculosis and influenza virus in a physiologically relevant animal model, increasing susceptibility to both pathogens.

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