Monocyte miRNAs govern both protective and pathological responses during tuberculosis (TB) through their differential expression and emerged as potent targets for biomarker discovery and host-directed therapeutics. Thus, this study examined the miRNA profile of sorted monocytes across the TB disease spectrum [drug-resistant TB (DR-TB), drug-sensitive TB (DS-TB), and latent TB] and in healthy individuals (HC) to understand the underlying pathophysiology and their regulatory mechanism.
We sorted total monocytes including three subsets (HLA-DR+CD14+, HLA-DR+CD14+CD16+, and HLA-DR+CD16+cells) from peripheral blood mononuclear cells (PBMCs) of healthy and TB-infected individuals through flow cytometry and subjected them to NanoString-based miRNA profiling.
The outcome was the differential expression of 107 miRNAs particularly the downregulation of miRNAs in the active TB groups (both drug-resistant and drug-sensitive). The miRNA profile revealed differential expression signatures: i) decline of miR-548m in DR-TB alone, ii) decline of miR-486-3p in active TB but significant elevation only in LTB iii) elevation of miR-132-3p only in active TB (DR-TB and DS-TB) and iv) elevation of miR-150-5p in DR-TB alone. The directionality of functions mediated by monocyte miRNAs from Gene Set Enrichment Analysis (GSEA) facilitated two phenomenal findings: i) a bidirectional response between active disease (activation profile in DR-TB and DS-TB compared to LTB and HC) and latent infection (suppression profile in LTB vs HC) and ii) hyper immune activation in the DR-TB group compared to DS-TB.
Thus, monocyte miRNA signatures provide pathological clues for altered monocyte function, drug resistance, and disease severity. Further studies on monocyte miRNAs may shed light on the immune regulatory mechanism for tuberculosis.