4.7 Article

Resuscitation-promoting Factors Reveal an Occult Population of Tubercle Bacilli in Sputum

出版社

AMER THORACIC SOC
DOI: 10.1164/rccm.200905-0661OC

关键词

tuberculosis; resuscitation-promoting factors; sputum; nonreplicating cells

资金

  1. Wellcome Trust
  2. British Lung Foundation
  3. UK Medical Research Council
  4. Henry Smith Charity
  5. East Midland Development Agency
  6. MRC [G0501435] Funding Source: UKRI
  7. Medical Research Council [G0501435] Funding Source: researchfish

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Rationale Resuscitation-promoting factors (Rpfs) are a family of secreted proteins produced by Mycobacterium tuberculosis (Mtb) that stimulate mycobacterial growth. Although mouse infection studies show that they support bacterial survival and disease reactivation, it is currently unknown whether Rpfs influence human infection. We hypothesized that tuberculous sputum might include a population of Rpf-dependent Mtb cells. Objectives: To determine whether Rpf-dependent Mtb cells are present in human sputum and explore the impact of chemotherapy on this population. Methods: In tuberculous sputum samples we compared the number of cells detected by conventional agar colony-forming assay with that determined by limiting dilution, most-probable number assay in the presence or absence of Rpf preparations. Measurements and Main Results: In 20 of 25 prechemotherapy samples from separate patients, 80-99.99% of the cells demonstrated by cultivation could be detected only with Rpf stimulation. Mtb cells with this phenotype were not generated on specimen storage or by inoculating sputum samples with a selection of clinical isolates; moreover, Rpf dependency was lost after primary isolation. During chemotherapy, the proportion of Rpf-dependent cells was found to increase relative to the surviving colony-forming population. Conclusions: Smear-positive sputum samples are dominated by a population of Mtb cells that can be grown only in the presence of Rpfs. These intriguing proteins are therefore relevant to human infection. The Rpf-dependent population is invisible to conventional culture and is progressively enhanced in relative terms during chemotherapy, indicating a form of phenotypic resistance that may be significant for both chemotherapy and transmission.

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