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Journal of Virology, December 2004, p. 14023-14032, Vol. 78, No. 24
0022-538X/04/$08.00+0 DOI: 10.1128/JVI.78.24.14023-14032.2004
Copyright © 2004, American Society for Microbiology. All Rights Reserved.
Department of Microbiology and Immunology, Center for Primate Biomedical Research, University of Illinois, Chicago, Illinois,1 Beth Israel Deaconess Medical Center, Harvard Medical School, Boston,2 New England Regional Primate Research Center, Southborough, Massachusetts3
Received 13 April 2004/ Accepted 3 August 2004
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Clinical studies have demonstrated that human immunodeficiency virus type 1 (HIV-1) infection is one of the most important risk factors for susceptibility to tuberculosis and reactivation tuberculosis. Purified protein derivative (PPD)-positive persons not infected with HIV-1 have a 10% lifetime risk of developing active tuberculosis, whereas coinfection with M. tuberculosis and HIV-1 is associated with a 5 to15% yearly risk of active tuberculosis (21). The specific cause of M. tuberculosis reactivation is unknown in the vast majority of cases, and it is clinically difficult to determine whether a case of tuberculous disease results from reactivation of latent bacilli or from a new infection (2). While HIV-1-induced immune suppression and loss of CD4 T cells likely account for an increased risk for developing tuberculosis, in-depth studies of the evolution of latent M. tuberculosis infection and reactivation/relapse of HIV-related tuberculosis have not been reported (1, 8, 21, 25). It is not known the extent to which T-cell immunodeficiency or immune suppression can trigger the reactivation of latent mycobacterial coinfection in HIV-1-infected individuals. Useful animal models for HIV-1 and latent M. tuberculosis infections should facilitate our definition of the immune mechanisms responsible for the reactivation of M. tuberculosis and relapse of tuberculosis.
We have recently demonstrated that macaque models of simian immunodeficiency virus of macaques (SIVmac)-Mycobacterium bovis BCG coinfection are useful for studying immune aspects and disease consequences of AIDS virus-related mycobacterial coinfection (23). We have shown that inoculation of SIVmac-infected macaques with a large dose of BCG can result in the development of active BCG coinfection and SIVmac-related tuberculosis-like disease within 1 to 4 months after BCG inoculation (23). This SIVmac-related tuberculosis-like disease is characterized clinically by persistent diarrhea, anorexia, and weight loss and, pathologically, by BCG dissemination and granulomas in multiple organs (23). The resultant BCG-induced disease was associated with progressive BCG coinfection as well as increased depletion and suppression of antigen-specific CD4 T cells (23). While these observations indicate that the competence of CD4 T cells is important for controlling active BCG coinfection, little is known about whether and how a given latent BCG coinfection can reactivate and evolve to mycobacterial disease in the setting of advanced SIVmac infection. This issue is relevant to understanding whether and how a latent infection with weakly virulent mycobacteria reactivates and causes disease in HIV-1-infected individuals. In the present studies, we prospectively evaluated clinically latent BCG infection in SIVmac-BCG-coinfected macaques and examined whether progression of T-cell deficiency or a superimposed compromise of the immune system by exposure to bacterial superantigen could cause reactivation of latent BCG coinfection and BCG-induced disease.
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M. bovis BCG coinfection. M. bovis BCG (Pasteur strain) was used for BCG coinfections as described previously (23). For all BCG infections, macaques were inoculated intravenously with 108 CFU of BCG. Two groups of SIVmac-infected macaques were included to study the reactivation of SIV-related tuberculosis (Table 1). The first group consisted of six SIVmac-infected macaques: monkeys 259, 276, 278, 269, 263, and 267 (monkeys 263 and 267 received simultaneous SIVmac-BCG coinfection). These animals had plasma SIV RNA levels of >105 copies/ml following infection. Five of the six macaques developed a BCG-associated clinical syndrome within 2 months of BCG reinfection or simultaneous SIV-BCG coinfection. This syndrome was controlled by the restoration of effective antimycobacterial immunity during antiretroviral treatment (reference 22 and see below). The resolution of BCG disease in these SIVmac-infected macaques provides a useful setting in which to assess BCG latency, reactivation of BCG coinfection, and the eventual relapse of SIV-related tuberculosis-like disease during progression of SIV infection. The second group of two SIVmac-infected monkeys (monkeys 336 and 349) had plasma SIV RNA levels below 104 copies/ml prior to BCG coinfection. Our previous studies have shown that SIVmac-infected macaques with low viral loads are not likely to develop fatal SIV-related tuberculosis-like disease after BCG coinfection (23). As controls, naïve macaques and animals previously infected with a nonpathogenic simian HIV (SHIV) were infected with BCG and assessed for BCG latency and reactivation of BCG-induced disease. Monkeys that became moribund and died from SIV-related tuberculosis-like disease were subjected to necropsy and histology studies of mycobacterium-related lesions in the lungs and other organs. Tissue sections were formalin fixed and stained by routine hematoxylin and eosin procedures. The Ziehl-Neelsen method was used for staining acid-fast bacilli in the lesions. Southern blot and sequencing analyses confirmed that acid-fast bacilli in lesions were BCG but not M. tuberculosis or Mycobacterium avium.
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TABLE 1. Clinical follow-up after BCG infections in SIVmac-infected macaques
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Antiretroviral treatment of SIVmac-BCG-coinfected macaques. Short-term antiretroviral therapy was employed to facilitate studies of clinically latent BCG coinfection. Antiretroviral treatment was introduced to restore protective immunity against mycobacterial disease at the onset of the SIV-BCG-related clinical syndrome during acute BCG infection. Five of eight SIVmac-BCG-coinfected monkeys were treated in this setting for 2 months with antiretroviral drugs (Table 1). The antiretroviral drug regimen was comprised of tenofovir (also termed PMPA) and a protease inhibitor, indinovir (Merck, Inc.), or tenofovir alone (22). The antiretroviral treatment reduced plasma SIV RNA levels, restored antimycobacterial immunity, and effectively treated the SIV-BCG-related clinical syndrome (22). Antiretroviral treatment was also used to determine if the increase in BCG replication after SEB superantigen challenge was dependent upon an increase in SIV viral loads in SIVmac-BCG-coinfected monkeys. The antiretroviral regimens were as follows: zidovudine, 8 mg/kg/day; lamivudine, 6 mg/kg/day; 141w94 (a protease inhibitor), 40 mg/kg/day. The three drugs were administered orally in pediatric syrup (Glaxo Wellcome, Research Triangle Park, N.C.) twice a day for 4 weeks, beginning 1 week before SEB superantigen challenge.
Immune flow cytometry analyses of T cells. To measure changes in numbers of CD4 T cells, three-color analyses of CD3, CD4, and CD8 T cells in whole blood were performed on an XL flow cytometer (Coulter, Hialeah, Fla.). Absolute numbers of T-cell populations in the blood were calculated based on the flow cytometric data and complete blood count analyses. Complete blood counts were performed on a Coulter T 540 hematologic analyzer. To examine SEB-induced expansions of reactive Vß-expressing T cells, three-color staining of whole blood and cells in lymph nodes was performed using fluorescein isothiocyanate (FITC)-conjugated anti-human Vß3 or Vß19 antibodies and phycoerythrin (PE)-conjugated anti-CD3 and Cy5-conjugated anti-CD8 antibodies (11). The following anti-human monoclonal antibodies that cross-react with corresponding macaque antigens were used: PE-conjugated anti-rhesus monkey CD3 (FN18; Biosource, Camarillo, Calif.), PE-conjugated anti-human CD4 (Ortho Diagnostic Systems, Raritan, N.J.), Cy5-conjugated anti-human CD8 (Dako Corporation, Carpinteria, Calif.), FITC-conjugated anti-human Vß3 and FITC-conjugated anti-human Vß5 (Endogen, Woburn, Mass.), and FITC-conjugated Vß19 (Coulter).
Proliferation assays. Conventional proliferation assays were carried out as described previously (23). Briefly, unfractionated peripheral blood lymphocytes (PBL) (1 x 105 cells per well) were cultured in triplicate in 96-well plates in the presence of BCG PPD (5 µg/ml), concanavalin A (ConA) (5 µg/ml), or medium alone. Five days later, cells were pulsed with [3H]thymidine at 1.0 µCi per well, and uptake was measured 8 h later using a 1450 Microbeta scintillation counter (Wallac, Gaithersburg, Md.). The stimulation index was defined as the ratio of the mean counts per minute of PPD- or ConA-stimulated wells relative to the mean counts per minute of control wells (medium alone).
Quantitative measurement of plasma SIV RNA. Both real-time quantitative PCR and quantitative competitive PCR (QC-PCR) were employed, as previously described (32), to measure levels of plasma SIV RNA. Briefly, viral RNA in plasma was extracted following the instructions of the RNA extraction kit from QIAGEN (Valencia, Calif.), and expression levels were measured using real-time quantitative PCR as previously described (31). The primers used for quantitation of SIVmac gag expression were as follows: forward primer, TGT CAA AAA ATA CTT TCG GTC TTA GC; reverse primer, GAT GAC GCA GAC AGT ATT ATA AAG GC; TaqMan probe, 6FAM-CCA TTA GTG CCA ACA GGC TCA GAA AAT TTA AAA-MGBNFQ. Real-time quantitative PCR was performed following instructions from the manufacturer as previously described (24). For QC-PCR, the extracted RNA was aliquoted into six different tubes, each of which contained defined copies of SIVmac gag competitor RNA. The RNA mixtures were reverse transcribed to cDNA and competitively amplified by a 35-cycle PCR using a pair of SIVmac gag-specific primers (26). The amplified PCR products containing wild-type and competitor were separated on 2% agarose gels and measured for their densities in a GS 700 Imaging Densitometer (Bio-Rad). Quantitation was achieved by data analysis using Molecular Analyst system software (Bio-Rad). The intra- and interassay coefficients of variation using this protocol were less than 20%. The sensitivity of real-time quantitative PCR or QC-PCR was 4 x 102 RNA copies in 1 ml of plasma.
Measurement of mycobacterial burdens. Quantitation of BCG infection was accomplished by measuring bacterial colony counts and levels of BCG Ag85B mRNA expression (24). Viable BCG colony counts in the lymph nodes were determined by the quantitation of BCG CFU in cell lysates from 106 lymph node cells from SIVmac-BCG-coinfected macaques. Cell pellets prepared from 106 lymph node cells were lysed with 10% saponin to release intracellular BCG. Fivefold dilutions of the lysate were plated in duplicate on Middlebrook 7H10 agar plates (Difco) (24). The CFU were counted after a 3-week incubation at 37°C. For measuring levels of BCG mRNA expression, BCG mRNA was extracted by TRIzol-based methods from lymph node cells, as previously described (24). The extracted RNA was reverse transcribed to cDNA. The synthesized cDNAs were used as templates to quantitate the expression of BCG Ag85B mRNA, using real-time quantitative PCR in a TaqMan system on an ABI 7700 system (PE Biosystems, Foster City, Calif.). Standard procedures of real-time PCR quantitation were followed based on the instructions of the operation manuals and technical support from ABI. To normalize the expression of Ag85B RNA in the cells, ß actin mRNA was also quantitated as previously described (24). The expression levels were expressed as mean copy numbers of Ag85B RNA in 106 ß-actin molecules. The detection limits for BCG CFU and Ag85B mRNA were determined by using 106 lymph node cells. The normalization of bacterial loads in tissues gave rise to an estimate of 1 to 3 BCG CFU and 10 copies of Ag85B mRNA in approximately 10 mg of lymph node tissues.
Statistical analysis. Student's t test and nonparametric tests, as described previously (23), were employed to examine whether any differences in BCG loads or reactivation of BCG coinfection and in PPD-specific T-cell responses were statistically significant.
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After the resolution of early BCG coinfection and BCG disease, the SIVmac-BCG-coinfected monkeys were assessed for latency and reactivation of BCG infection and for clinical progression of the coinfection in the absence of antiretroviral treatment (Table 1). The clinical quiescence was characterized by an absence of signs of illness (Table 1). Following this quiescent phase, which lasted up to 17 months, these animals again developed a clinical syndrome characterized by diarrhea, anorexia, and wasting (Table 1 and Fig. 1).
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FIG. 1. Evolution of clinically latent BCG coinfection in SIVmac-infected macaques. Changes in bacterial colony counts (top) and levels of BCG Ag85B mRNA expression (bottom) in lymph node cells of the coinfected monkeys. All data were generated from superficial lymph nodes except for those for end time points for monkeys 276 and 278, for which data were derived from spleen cells. The last data points correspond to the time at which animals were moribund or dead due to the terminal stage of SIV-related tuberculosis-like disease. BCG CFU were measured by using lysates of 106 cells from lymph nodes or spleens obtained from macaques after BCG coinfection, whereas levels of BCG mRNA were determined as copy numbers in 106 ß-actin molecules. Higher levels of mRNA transcripts in comparison with CFU might reflect the sensitive nature of real-time PCR quantitation of mRNA expression. The BCG CFU loads in monkeys might be underestimated due to using a limited amount of tissues for CFU measurement and due to the difficulty in isolating or growing intracellularly adapted BCG under these culture conditions. Monkeys 259 and 278 exhibited detectable BCG mRNA before BCG coinfection (day 0 for the second BCG inoculation) because SIVmac infection resulted in a delayed clearance of BCG after the first BCG inoculation (2 months before SIV infection). Monkeys 259, 276, 278, and 269 were injected with a single dose of SEB 0.5 to 5 months prior to death, whereas monkeys 263 and 267 did not receive SEB injection. CFU data for monkey 269 were not shown since CFU measurements of viable BCG could not be done at some time points due to insufficient available cells. However, viable BCG bacilli were isolated from mesentery lymph node cells (20 CFU/106cells) at the final point. Monkeys 336 and 349, with low viral loads, survived the coinfection during an 18-month follow-up despite receiving an SEB injection 6 months after BCG coinfection. A P value of <0.001 was obtained when nonparametric statistical analyses were performed to evaluate any differences in BCG CFU or Ag85B mRNA at final time points versus those obtained 4 months after the last BCG inoculation for the control group and the SIVmac-BCG-coinfected group.
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Reactivation of BCG resulted in the development of SIV-related tuberculosis-like disease. We then characterized the pathological changes seen in these SIVmac-BCG-coinfected monkeys with active disease. Complete necropsies demonstrated the gross and histological findings of BCG-related inflammation (Table 2). Evidence of chronic diarrhea and weight loss was seen in these macaques. The diarrhea and weight loss appeared to be related to BCG coinfection, since granulomatous inflammation or acid-fast bacilli were identified in intestinal mucosae and other organs of these animals and there was no gross or histological evidence indicating the presence of other opportunistic infections (Table 2). Evidence of BCG-related granulomatous inflammation was mainly found in lymphoid tissues, such as spleen and mesenteric lymph nodes, of the SIVmac-BCG-coinfected monkeys (Fig. 2). The lesions varied in degree from severe disseminated granulomas to the multifocal infiltration of epithelioid cells or modified histiocytes. Interestingly, macaque 259 even developed central caseous necrosis and some mineralization within the granulomas, pathological lesions resembling what is seen in patients with tuberculosis (Fig. 2a and b). Consistent with the presence of these BCG-related lesions, high levels of BCG Ag85B mRNA expression and high BCG bacterial counts were documented in the cells isolated from lymphoid tissues (Fig. 3). In contrast, the control normal or SHIV-infected macaques showed no evidence of wasting or BCG-related lesions in examined tissues. In the two SIVmac-infected macaques (monkeys 336 and 349) that survived BCG coinfection, no pathological lesions were seen in the biopsies collected from the colon, bone marrow, and lymph nodes. These results therefore provided pathological evidence that BCG reactivation can result in a relapse of SIV-related tuberculosis-like disease in SIVmac-infected macaques.
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TABLE 2. Progression of latent BCG infection during advanced SIVmac infection can result in development of SIV-related BCG disease
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FIG. 2. Reactivation of BCG coinfection in advanced SIVmac infection resulted in the development of SIV-related tuberculosis-like disease. Histological evaluation of those SIVmac-BCG-coinfected macaques that were euthanized with mycobacterial disease showed representative granulomatous inflammation in the lymph nodes (a and b), spleen (c), and colon mucosae (d), with granulomas present in multiple organs. Sections in panels a, b, and c were formalin fixed and stained by hematoxylin and eosin, whereas the section in panel d was stained by the Ziehl-Neelsen method for identifying acid-fast bacilli. Southern blot and sequencing analyses indicated that the acid-fast bacilli were BCG but not M. tuberculosis or M. avium. The specimens were collected at the time the animals were moribund or dead due to terminal SIVmac-BCG disease. Shown in panels a and b are necroticgranulomas and mineralization, respectively, in lymph nodes from monkey 259. Shown in panel c is a nonnecrotic granulomatous lesion in the spleen section from monkey 276. Shown in panel d is positive acid-fast staining in colon mucosae obtained from monkey 278. All the sections shown are at x20 magnification.
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FIG. 3. Monkeys that developed SIV-related BCG disease exhibited high levels of Ag85B mRNA expression and BCG organisms in cells obtained from organs at necropsy. SupLN and MesLN represent superficial and mesenteric lymph nodes, respectively. The BCG CFU reflected an estimated number of viable BCG organisms per approximately 10 mg of an organ, whereas those of Ag85B mRNA represented the estimated level of BCG mRNA transcripts per approximately 1 mg of an organ (see Materials and Methods). The organs of the monkeys varied in sizes and weights due to differences in age, sex, body weight, and extent of inflammation of the animals. SP, spleen.
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FIG. 4. SEB superantigen-induced compromise of the immune system resulted in an up-regulation of clinically latent BCG coinfection. (a) SEB challenge induced increases in levels of viable bacterial organisms and Ag85B mRNA expression in cells obtained from lymph nodes of SIVmac-BCG-coinfected monkeys. (b) Changes in plasma SIV RNA and CD4+ PBL counts after SEB challenge of monkeys. (c) SEB challenge stimulated an expansion of SEB-reactive Vß3+ and Vß19+ CD3+ T cells in SIVmac-infected monkeys. SEB did not stimulate an expansion of control Vß5 T cells (data not shown and reference 11). Monkeys 259, 278, and 336 were treated for 4 weeks with triple antiretroviral drugs (see Materials and Methods), which started 1 week before SEB injection. Note that monkeys 259 and 278 showed a decrease or no change in levels of plasma SIV RNA after SEB challenge. The SIVmac-BCG-coinfected monkeys 269 and 259 died 0.5 and 1.5 months, respectively, after SEB challenge due to progression of SIV-related tuberculosis-like disease. Monkeys 276 and 278 died 5 months after SEB injection. Monkeys 336 and 349 had low levels of plasma SIV RNA and survived BCG coinfection during the follow-up. A P value of <0.001 was obtained for statistical analyses of differences in BCG CFU or Ag85B mRNA before and after SEB challenge between the control group and the SIVmac-BCG-coinfected group.
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FIG. 5. Reactivation of SIV-related tuberculosis-like disease was associated with an advanced deficiency of CD4 T cells and loss of BCG-specific T-cell responses. (a) Changes in CD4 PBL counts and plasma SIV RNA levels during the follow-up studies. (b) Changes in magnitudes of PPD-driven proliferative responses in PBL during the course of SIVmac-BCG coinfection. Stimulation indexes of PPD (left)- and ConA (right)-driven responses were obtained by dividing their mean values by the mean values of control medium-driven responses. Note that the absence of reactivation of BCG coinfection in monkeys 336 and 349 was associated with low levels of plasma SIV RNA and sustained levels of CD4 PBL counts and proliferative responses. A P value of <0.01 was obtained for statistical analyses of differences in PPD-specific proliferative responses at the final point versus 6 months earlier between the group with BCG disease (monkeys 259, 276, 278, and 263) and the group without BCG disease (monkeys 185, 545, 336, and 349).
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The evolution of latency and reactivation of BCG replication appear to be consistent with the progression to clinical quiescence and then to the relapse of tuberculosis-like disease in SIVmac-BCG-coinfected monkeys. Using sensitive real-time quantitative PCR for detection of bacterial loads, we were able to detect low but measurable levels of BCG Ag85B mRNA expression after resolution of the early BCG infection, although viable BCG organisms are not readily isolated during this period of clinical latency. The difficulty in detecting viable BCG during the period of clinical quiescence may be attributed to the limited numbers of cells isolated from the biopsied lymph nodes. Changes in the biological characteristics of latent BCG organisms may also contribute to the difficulty in cultivating bacteria (30). Detectable levels of BCG Ag85B mRNA expression in the lymph nodes of these monkeys reflect the degree of clinical latency of the BCG infections, since in vitro studies have shown that BCG mRNA was detectable in viable but not dead BCG organisms (data not shown). Our present results suggest that monitoring of mycobacterial mRNA expression may be useful for following clinically latent mycobacterial coinfection in AIDS virus-infected individuals.
Various pathological lesions are evident in SIVmac-BCG-coinfected monkeys after reactivation of latent BCG coinfections. In some SIVmac-BCG-coinfected monkeys, the reactivation of the BCG infection was associated with the presence of lesions characterized by infiltration of histiocytes. In other SIVmac-BCG-coinfected monkeys, both nonnecrotic granulomas and necrotic granulomas with calcification were found at the time they developed SIV-related tuberculosis-like disease. Granulomatous lesions with caseous necrosis and mineral calcification were seen in one SIVmac-BCG-coinfected monkey who developed a typical relapse of SIV-BCG-related disease. Such lesions are similar to the granulomatous inflammation caused by M. tuberculosis in immune-competent persons and HIV-1-infected patients (26). The necrotic lesions with calcification were not identified in the tissues of the SIVmac-BCG-coinfected monkeys who died from acutely progressive tuberculosis-like disease within 4 months of BCG coinfection (23). The difference in the characteristics of these lesions may be related to the extent of SIVmac-BCG coinfection and the immune status of the monkeys at the time they develop reactivation/relapse of their BCG infection.
Our studies demonstrate the interesting finding that exposure of the immune system to SEB bacterial superantigen can result in the up-regulation of BCG coinfection. This result suggests that a compromise of the immune system caused by superantigen-producing microbes may predispose mycobacterium-infected AIDS patients with low CD4 T cell counts to reactivation of latent mycobacterial coinfection. Surprisingly, the up-regulation of BCG coinfection was independent of an increase in SIV viral loads in the monkeys. Several immune mechanisms may explain SEB superantigen-induced augmentation of BCG replication in SIVmac-BCG-coinfected monkeys. Since SEB superantigen engagement of major histocompatibility complex class II can directly stimulate monocytes/macrophages (10, 15), such a stimulation may result in an enhancement of mycobacterial replication in BCG-infected monocytes/macrophages. SEB may also enhance BCG replication in SIV-BCG-coinfected monocytes/macrophages if SEB stimulates a biological interaction between SIV and BCG in monocytes/macrophages. We cannot exclude this possibility for those SIVmac-BCG-coinfected monkeys whose plasma SIV RNA levels were reduced by antiretroviral treatment at the time of SEB superantigen exposure (Fig. 4b). SEB superantigen exposure results in the production of large amounts of various cytokines (10), and these inflammatory cytokines may up-regulate mycobacterial infection in SIVmac-BCG-coinfected monkeys. While some inflammatory cytokines may undermine the antimycobacterial immune mechanisms that are important for balancing latent BCG infection, other cytokines may be directly involved in the up-regulation of BCG coinfection. Furthermore, since SEB-mediated activation and expansion of selected Vß-expressing T cells inevitably results in the deletion of those reactive T cells, the SEB-associated massive turnover of CD4 and CD8 T cells may result in a loss of functional mycobacterium-specific CD4 or CD8 T cells. The decrease in numbers and function of mycobacterium-specific T cells may facilitate reactivation or enhancement of latent BCG coinfection. Since the in vivo effect of SEB superantigen on the macaque immune system is prolonged (11), SEB-induced immunopathological events may accelerate the clinical progression of SIVmac-BCG coinfection and contribute to the evolution of SIV-related tuberculosis-like disease. This possibility is supported by the finding that monkeys 269 and 259 died from SIV-related tuberculosis-like disease within 6 weeks of SEB exposure.
While previous studies have demonstrated a crucial role of CD4 T cells in controlling acute BCG coinfection in SIVmac-infected monkeys, the results of the current experiments suggest that CD4 T cells are also important for containing latent BCG infection. Marked reductions in numbers of CD4 T cells and magnitudes of their proliferative responses were seen coincident with the reactivation of latent BCG infection and development of tuberculosis-like disease in the SIVmac-BCG-coinfected monkeys. In contrast, in the two SIVmac-infected monkeys who survived BCG coinfection, BCG mRNA was undetectable in lymph nodes after intravenous inoculation with large doses of BCG. Prospective studies showed that these two monkeys maintained sustained CD4 PBL counts and potent PPD-specific T-cell responses during the latent BCG infection and period of clinical quiescence. These data suggest that CD4 T cells play a role in controlling latent mycobacterial coinfection in AIDS virus-infected individuals. Such results are consistent with the clinical observations of HIV-M. tuberculosis-coinfected humans, but different from the findings reported for a T-cell-depletion study of mice (5). CD4 T-cell-mediated control of latent infection has not been demonstrated in the murine model of latent M. tuberculosis infection (28), although murine CD4 T cells have been shown to play a central role in controlling acute/persistent M. tuberculosis infections (5). Differences between species, the extent of T-cell depletion, and the nature of the infections may contribute to the different observations for mice and primates. The current studies of monkeys cannot exclude the possibility that AIDS virus infections have an impact on other immune parameters and aspects of mycobacterial biology that are involved in reactivation of latent mycobacterial infection. We have recently demonstrated that CD8 and 
T cells have important roles in the adaptive immune responses during mycobacterial infections in monkeys (12, 24). The inhibition or dysfunction of these mycobacterium-specific T cells in advanced SIVmac infection may contribute to the reactivation or relapse of SIV-related tuberculosis-like disease.
The current studies allow us to evaluate the evolution of latency and reactivation of mycobacterial coinfection/disease in SIVmac-infected monkeys. Our findings provide experimental evidence that reactivation of latent mycobacterial coinfection or mycobacterial disease can occur as a result of a loss of T-cell immunity or from superantigen-induced compromise of immune function.
We thank other members of the Chen lab for technical support.
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2V
2+ T-cell responses during active mycobacterial coinfection of simian immunodeficiency virus SIVmac-infected monkeys. J. Virol. 77:2998-3006.
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