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NK cell determinants of immunity to mycobacterium tuberculosis in humans

Natural killer (NK) cells are highly equipped responders to pathogen-infected and neoplastic cells by directly killing target cells and secreting immunoregulatory cytokines. Our understanding of the role of NK cells in TB pathogenesis remains incomplete. This thesis aimed to investigate the function...

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Main Author: Young-Bailie, Carly
Other Authors: Rozot, Virginie
Format: Thesis
Language:English
Published: Department of Pathology 2024
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access_status_str Open Access
author Young-Bailie, Carly
author2 Rozot, Virginie
author_browse Rozot, Virginie
Young-Bailie, Carly
author_facet Rozot, Virginie
Young-Bailie, Carly
author_sort Young-Bailie, Carly
collection Thesis
description Natural killer (NK) cells are highly equipped responders to pathogen-infected and neoplastic cells by directly killing target cells and secreting immunoregulatory cytokines. Our understanding of the role of NK cells in TB pathogenesis remains incomplete. This thesis aimed to investigate the functional role of NK cells during progression to TB disease and to characterize NK subsets across human tissues in TB and healthy controls. In this thesis, NK cells were studied in a cohort of Mtb-infected adolescents who were followed up over two years. Using mass cytometry, results showed that cytokine responses by NK cells in the peripheral blood were lower at distal timepoints but increased significantly with time to diagnosis in those who progressed to TB, compared to those who controlled Mtb infection. Functional investigation using a flow cytometry cytokine neutralization assay suggested that peripheral blood NK cell function and cytotoxic potential during TB disease was dependent on T cell bystander activation. Despite important findings in peripheral blood, the TB field lacks a comprehensive understanding of phenotypic and functional characteristics of NK cells in human tissues, where the disease mostly manifests. To address this gap, human NK cells were characterized in a cohort of TB patients who succumbed to disease, and controls who were apparently healthy but died from trauma. Using postmortem samples from peripheral blood, lung, hilar lymph nodes, bronchoalveolar lavage (BAL), and spleen, NK cell phenotypes and cytotoxic potential were characterized by mass cytometry. Results showed that NK cells in the peripheral blood of TB patients displayed predominantly mature, activated phenotypes, expressing higher levels of cytotoxic molecules in TB than those from healthy controls. In contrast, NK cells in tissues, including lungs, hilar lymph nodes, BAL, and spleen were phenotypically immature and lacked expression of maturation markers and cytotoxic molecules. Immature NK cells with low cytotoxic potential were particularly enriched in the TB lung relative to controls. Further investigation into the functional capacity of immature lung NK cells that accumulate during TB disease may reveal mechanistic targets for clinical interventions. This thesis delves into the complex phenotypic and functional characteristics of NK cells, offering insights into tissue immunology in the context of TB disease. The findings presented herein have relevance in immunopathogenesis and development of new interventions, such as vaccines.
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institution University of Cape Town (South Africa)
language eng
last_indexed 2026-06-10T12:34:27.383Z
license_str Not specified — see source repository
provenance_str_mv Harvested via OAI-PMH from UCTD — University of Cape Town Open Access Repository
publishDate 2024
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source_str UCTD — University of Cape Town Open Access Repository
spelling oai:open.uct.ac.za:11427/39934 NK cell determinants of immunity to mycobacterium tuberculosis in humans Young-Bailie, Carly Rozot, Virginie Pathology Natural killer (NK) cells are highly equipped responders to pathogen-infected and neoplastic cells by directly killing target cells and secreting immunoregulatory cytokines. Our understanding of the role of NK cells in TB pathogenesis remains incomplete. This thesis aimed to investigate the functional role of NK cells during progression to TB disease and to characterize NK subsets across human tissues in TB and healthy controls. In this thesis, NK cells were studied in a cohort of Mtb-infected adolescents who were followed up over two years. Using mass cytometry, results showed that cytokine responses by NK cells in the peripheral blood were lower at distal timepoints but increased significantly with time to diagnosis in those who progressed to TB, compared to those who controlled Mtb infection. Functional investigation using a flow cytometry cytokine neutralization assay suggested that peripheral blood NK cell function and cytotoxic potential during TB disease was dependent on T cell bystander activation. Despite important findings in peripheral blood, the TB field lacks a comprehensive understanding of phenotypic and functional characteristics of NK cells in human tissues, where the disease mostly manifests. To address this gap, human NK cells were characterized in a cohort of TB patients who succumbed to disease, and controls who were apparently healthy but died from trauma. Using postmortem samples from peripheral blood, lung, hilar lymph nodes, bronchoalveolar lavage (BAL), and spleen, NK cell phenotypes and cytotoxic potential were characterized by mass cytometry. Results showed that NK cells in the peripheral blood of TB patients displayed predominantly mature, activated phenotypes, expressing higher levels of cytotoxic molecules in TB than those from healthy controls. In contrast, NK cells in tissues, including lungs, hilar lymph nodes, BAL, and spleen were phenotypically immature and lacked expression of maturation markers and cytotoxic molecules. Immature NK cells with low cytotoxic potential were particularly enriched in the TB lung relative to controls. Further investigation into the functional capacity of immature lung NK cells that accumulate during TB disease may reveal mechanistic targets for clinical interventions. This thesis delves into the complex phenotypic and functional characteristics of NK cells, offering insights into tissue immunology in the context of TB disease. The findings presented herein have relevance in immunopathogenesis and development of new interventions, such as vaccines. 2024-06-19T07:46:18Z 2024-06-19T07:46:18Z 2023 2024-06-06T13:47:14Z Thesis / Dissertation Doctoral PhD http://hdl.handle.net/11427/39934 eng application/pdf Department of Pathology Faculty of Health Sciences
spellingShingle Pathology
Young-Bailie, Carly
NK cell determinants of immunity to mycobacterium tuberculosis in humans
thesis_degree_str Doctoral
title NK cell determinants of immunity to mycobacterium tuberculosis in humans
title_full NK cell determinants of immunity to mycobacterium tuberculosis in humans
title_fullStr NK cell determinants of immunity to mycobacterium tuberculosis in humans
title_full_unstemmed NK cell determinants of immunity to mycobacterium tuberculosis in humans
title_short NK cell determinants of immunity to mycobacterium tuberculosis in humans
title_sort nk cell determinants of immunity to mycobacterium tuberculosis in humans
topic Pathology
url http://hdl.handle.net/11427/39934
work_keys_str_mv AT youngbailiecarly nkcelldeterminantsofimmunitytomycobacteriumtuberculosisinhumans