期刊
TUBERCULOSIS
卷 94, 期 1, 页码 8-14出版社
CHURCHILL LIVINGSTONE
DOI: 10.1016/j.tube.2013.07.004
关键词
Tuberculosis; Latency; Persistence; Reactivation
资金
- NIAID NIH HHS [U01 AI070456] Funding Source: Medline
- NATIONAL INSTITUTE OF ALLERGY AND INFECTIOUS DISEASES [U01AI070456] Funding Source: NIH RePORTER
It is set in stone that Mycobacterium tuberculosis is a facultative intracellular bacterial parasite. This axiom drives our knowledge of the host response, the way we design vaccines against the organism by generating protective T cells, and to a lesser extent, the way we try to target anti-microbial drugs. The purpose of this article is to commit total heresy. I believe that M. tuberculosis can equally well be regarded as an extracellular pathogen and may in fact spend a large percentage of its human lung life-cycle in this environment. It is of course intracellular as well, but this may well be little more than a brief interlude after infection of a new host during which the bacterium must replicate to increase its chances of transmission and physiologically adapt prior to moving back to an extracellular phase. As a result, by focusing almost completely on just the intracellular phase, we may be making serious strategic errors in the way we try to intervene in this pathogenic process. It is my opinion that when a TB bacillus enters the lungs and starts to reside inside an alveolar macrophage, its central driving force is to switch on a process leading to lung necrosis, since it is only by this process that the local lung tissue can be destroyed and the bacillus can be exhaled and transmitted. I present here a new model of the pathogenesis of the disease that attempts to unify the pathogenic process of infection, disease, persistence [ rather than latency], and reactivation. (C) 2013 Elsevier Ltd. All rights reserved.
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