Mathematical Model of the Immunopathological Progression of Tuberculosis

被引:1
作者
Flores-Garza, Eliezer [1 ]
Zetter, Mario A. [2 ]
Hernandez-Pando, Rogelio [2 ]
Dominguez-Huttinger, Elisa [1 ]
机构
[1] Univ Nacl Autonoma Mexico, Dept Biol Mol & Biotecnol, Inst Invest Biomed, Mexico City, Mexico
[2] Inst Nacl Ciencias Med & Nutr Salvador Zubiran, Dept Patol, Secc Patol Expt, Mexico City, Mexico
来源
FRONTIERS IN SYSTEMS BIOLOGY | 2022年 / 2卷
关键词
tuberculosis (TB); systems biology; multi-level data integration; systems medicine; immune system modeling; modeling disease dynamics; disease outcome prediction; disease-transition map; MYCOBACTERIUM-TUBERCULOSIS; IMMUNE-RESPONSE; PULMONARY TUBERCULOSIS; DENDRITIC CELLS; SYSTEMS BIOLOGY; INFECTION; PATHOGENESIS; MECHANISMS; GRANULOMA; STRAINS;
D O I
10.3389/fsysb.2022.912974
中图分类号
学科分类号
摘要
Tuberculosis is a worldwide persistent infectious disease. It is caused by bacteria from the Mycobacterium tuberculosis complex that mainly affects the lungs and can be fatal. Using an integrative systems biology approach, we study the immunopathological progression of this disease, analyzing the key interactions between the cells involved in the different phases of the infectious process. We integrated multiple in vivo and in vitro data from immunohistochemical, serological, molecular biology, and cell count assays into a mechanistic mathematical model. The ordinary differential equation (ODE) model captures the regulatory interplay between the phenotypic variation of the main cells involved in the disease progression and the inflammatory microenvironment. The model reproduces in vivo time course data of an experimental model of progressive pulmonary TB in mouse, accurately reflecting the functional adaptations of the host-pathogen interactions as the disease progresses through three phenotypically different phases. We used the model to assess the effect of genotypic variations (encoded as changes in parameters) on disease outcomes. For all genotypes, we found an all-or-nothing response, where the virtual mouse either completely clears the infection or suffers uncontrolled Tb growth. Results show that it is 84% probable that a mouse submitted to a progressive pulmonary TB assay will end up with an uncontrolled infection. The simulations also showed how the genotypic variations shape the transitions across phases, showing that 100% of the genotypes evaluated eventually progress to phase two of the disease, suggesting that adaptive immune response activation was unavoidable. All the genotypes of the network that avoided progressing to phase 3 cleared the infection. Later, by analyzing the three different phases separately, we saw that the anti-inflammatory genotype of phase 3 was the one with the highest probability of leading to uncontrolled bacterial growth, and the proinflammatory genotype associated with phase 2 had the highest probability of bacterial clearance. Forty-two percent of the genotypes evaluated showed a bistable response, with one stable steady state corresponding to infection clearance and the other one to bacteria reaching its carrying capacity. Our mechanistic model can be used to predict the outcomes of different experimental conditions through in silico assays.
引用
收藏
页数:15
相关论文
共 56 条
  • [21] Expression of inducible nitric oxide synthase and nitrotyrosine during the evolution of experimental pulmonary tuberculosis
    Hernández-Pando, R
    Schön, T
    Orozco, EH
    Serafin, J
    Estrada-García, I
    [J]. EXPERIMENTAL AND TOXICOLOGIC PATHOLOGY, 2001, 53 (04) : 257 - 265
  • [22] HernandezPando R, 1996, IMMUNOLOGY, V89, P26
  • [23] HERNANDEZPANDO R, 1995, FEMS IMMUNOL MED MIC, V12, P63, DOI 10.1111/j.1574-695X.1995.tb00176.x
  • [24] The Influence of Sex Steroid Hormones in the Immunopathology of Experimental Pulmonary Tuberculosis
    Isabel Bini, Estela
    Mata Espinosa, Dulce
    Marquina Castillo, Brenda
    Barrios Payan, Jorge
    Colucci, Dario
    Francisco Cruz, Alejandro
    Lucia Zatarain, Zyanya
    Alfonseca, Edgar
    Romano Pardo, Marta
    Bottasso, Oscar
    Hernandez Pando, Rogelio
    [J]. PLOS ONE, 2014, 9 (04):
  • [25] Fas Determines Differential Fates of Resident and Recruited Macrophages during Resolution of Acute Lung Injury
    Janssen, William J.
    Barthel, Lea
    Muldrow, Alaina
    Oberley-Deegan, Rebecca E.
    Kearns, Mark T.
    Jakubzick, Claudia
    Henson, Peter M.
    [J]. AMERICAN JOURNAL OF RESPIRATORY AND CRITICAL CARE MEDICINE, 2011, 184 (05) : 547 - 560
  • [26] M1 Means Kill; M2 Means Heal
    Ley, Klaus
    [J]. JOURNAL OF IMMUNOLOGY, 2017, 199 (07) : 2191 - 2193
  • [27] A marked difference in pathogenesis and immune response induced by different Mycobacterium tuberculosis genotypes
    López, B
    Aguilar, D
    Orozco, H
    Burger, M
    Espitia, C
    Ritacco, V
    Barrera, L
    Kremer, K
    Hernandez-Pando, R
    Huygen, K
    Van Soolingen, D
    [J]. CLINICAL AND EXPERIMENTAL IMMUNOLOGY, 2003, 133 (01) : 30 - 37
  • [28] Systems biology and the future of medicine
    Loscalzo, Joseph
    Barabasi, Albert-Laszlo
    [J]. WILEY INTERDISCIPLINARY REVIEWS-SYSTEMS BIOLOGY AND MEDICINE, 2011, 3 (06) : 619 - 627
  • [29] Magombedze G, 2006, MATH BIOSCI ENG, V3, P661
  • [30] A Multi-Compartment Hybrid Computational Model Predicts Key Roles for Dendritic Cells in Tuberculosis Infection
    Marino, Simeone
    Kirschner, Denise E.
    [J]. COMPUTATION, 2016, 4 (04):