About this Research Topic
Advances in genomics, animal models and vaccinology have enabled promising, innovative approaches to tackling TB infection. However, major knowledge gaps remain, including a fundamental understanding of LTBI, how the balance of host and pathogen factors determine whether infection will be sterilized or progressive in the initial stages of infection, and mechanisms accounting for the stable host-pathogen co-evolution seen in Mtb strains. Innate immunity is also a crucial link in determining downstream adaptive immunity, which is responsible for formation of granulomas that provide a cordon around Mtb-infected macrophages, potentially establishing latency and acting as a reservoir for bacterial persistence and dissemination of future disease. The goal of this special issue is to attract research articles, reviews, commentaries, and brief correspondence that contribute to the understanding of host immunity against TB and the role this plays in the pathogenesis and protection against the disease.
Areas to be covered in the current Research Topic may include, but are not limited to:
• Innate immunity in tuberculosis at the early stages of infection
• The bridge between innate immunity and adaptive immunity in tuberculosis: consequences for pathogenesis and protection.
• Cellular and humoral players involved in the establishment and maintenance of the granuloma
• Clinical advances in using RNA-Seq as a diagnostic and disease monitoring strategy in TB
• Developments in animal and ex vivo/in vitro models to study TB pathogenesis, (e.g. bovine TB, in vitro granulomas, Zebrafish and primate models)
• Candidates and approaches for vaccines against tuberculosis
• Novel drug targets for active TB and LBTI
• Clinical and epidemiological studies on genetic associations with TB disease
• Evolution of mycobacterial strains (e.g. M. tuberculosis and M. bovis) that identify virulence determinants.
• Pathogenesis of bovine TB
Keywords: Mycobacterium tuberculosis, granuloma, innate immunity, Multi-drug resistant tuberculosis, latent tuberculosis
Important Note: All contributions to this Research Topic must be within the scope of the section and journal to which they are submitted, as defined in their mission statements. Frontiers reserves the right to guide an out-of-scope manuscript to a more suitable section or journal at any stage of peer review.