4.6 Review

Host-directed therapy to combat mycobacterial infections*

Journal

IMMUNOLOGICAL REVIEWS
Volume 301, Issue 1, Pages 62-83

Publisher

WILEY
DOI: 10.1111/imr.12951

Keywords

drug resistance; host‐ directed therapy; Mycobacterium avium; Mycobacterium tuberculosis; nontuberculous mycobacteria

Categories

Funding

  1. Netherlands Organisation for Scientific Research (NWO-TTW) [16444]
  2. European Union [847762]
  3. IMI2 JU (AMR Accelerator program) [853932, 853903]

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This article discusses the host responses to mycobacterial infection and the mechanisms that affect bacterial killing, introducing the advantages of host-directed therapy (HDT). It focuses on the potential applications of HDT for both tuberculosis and nontuberculous mycobacteria, as well as future research directions.
Upon infection, mycobacteria, such as Mycobacterium tuberculosis (Mtb) and nontuberculous mycobacteria (NTM), are recognized by host innate immune cells, triggering a series of intracellular processes that promote mycobacterial killing. Mycobacteria, however, have developed multiple counter-strategies to persist and survive inside host cells. By manipulating host effector mechanisms, including phagosome maturation, vacuolar escape, autophagy, antigen presentation, and metabolic pathways, pathogenic mycobacteria are able to establish long-lasting infection. Counteracting these mycobacteria-induced host modifying mechanisms can be accomplished by host-directed therapeutic (HDT) strategies. HDTs offer several major advantages compared to conventional antibiotics: (a) HDTs can be effective against both drug-resistant and drug-susceptible bacteria, as well as potentially dormant mycobacteria; (b) HDTs are less likely to induce bacterial drug resistance; and (c) HDTs could synergize with, or shorten antibiotic treatment by targeting different pathways. In this review, we will explore host-pathogen interactions that have been identified for Mtb for which potential HDTs impacting both innate and adaptive immunity are available, and outline those worthy of future research. We will also discuss possibilities to target NTM infection by HDT, although current knowledge regarding host-pathogen interactions for NTM is limited compared to Mtb. Finally, we speculate that combinatorial HDT strategies can potentially synergize to achieve optimal mycobacterial host immune control.

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